Showing posts with label Angels. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Angels. Show all posts

Friday, 18 November 2022

Six essays on angels

 

I have given a number of talks about angels (and putti, fairies and dragons) - all the result of an article I published in the journal Opticon26 [it can be accessed here: https://www.readcube.com/articles/10.5334%2Fopt.070906]. That piece was picked up by the international Press and this is one example of the stories that resulted: https://www.telegraph.co.uk/topics/christmas/6860351/Angels-cant-fly-scientist-says.html

Having written several subsequent essays on angels, I thought it might be of interest if I grouped their links into one place, so here they are, in chronological order:

Giotto, Angels, and Heaven http://www.rwotton.blogspot.com/2015/02/giotto-angels-and-heaven.html

Do souls have wings? http://www.rwotton.blogspot.com/2015/10/do-souls-have-wings.html

Angels, Nike, Superman and Darth Vader https://rwotton.blogspot.com/2016/05/angels-nike-superman-and-darth-vader.html

Angels, Billy Graham and me https://rwotton.blogspot.com/2017/04/angels-billy-graham-and-me.html

Why are there no bearded angels? https://rwotton.blogspot.com/2021/03/why-are-there-no-bearded-angels.html

Angels, dinosaurs and artists’ impressions https://rwotton.blogspot.com/2022/11/angels-dinosaurs-and-artists-impressions.html

 

 

Wednesday, 2 November 2022

Angels, dinosaurs and artists’ impressions

We have long used optical telescopes to view distant objects, both living and non-living, making them easier to identify. More recently, technology has provided us with telescopes that record information transmitted over vast distances, allowing us to see distant stars, and even to look back in time as we view the expanding universe.

Similarly, optical microscopes reveal much more than we can see with the naked eye, and electron microscopes, of both scanning and transmission types, make very minute structures visible, although preparation methods require that care must be taken in interpreting what we see. Advances have also been made in the analysis of living and non-living materials that enable us to look at traces of organic chemicals from small samples and, using these approaches, we can analyse the composition of fragments and relate these to their origins. The commonplace use of an individual’s DNA in a blood stain is just one example.

Even armed with this information, we need expert analysis of what we see to make sense of it and this is aided by visual imagery, either generated by computer technologies, or by the hand of an artist. Artists’ impressions are invaluable in re-creating images of things that are no longer present and which we therefore have no chance of seeing. An example comes in the very numerous portrayals of religious scenes, where we are frequently shown images of Jesus, although we have no record of how He looked. The same goes for God, the disciples and all the other characters, as well as Heaven and Hell.



Other beings in religious paintings are given a physical presence that is unlikely or symbolic. The Holy Spirit is frequently depicted as a white dove, while angels have a characteristic appearance that we all recognise [1], with bird wings on a human body that also has arms (an example by Tiepolo is shown above). Taken as being real, these angels would not be able to fly, as the wings of birds have developed from the fore limbs of their reptile ancestors. With arms already present, the wings of angels, and the muscles to operate them, must be located quite differently on the body (I’m not suggesting here that angels do not exist, but that their physical form in paintings and sculpture means that they cannot fly using their wings). It’s an example of where artists’ impressions are very useful in creating images that subsequently have "reality".

Another world that fascinates us, and of which we have no direct knowledge, is that of dinosaurs. We’ve never seen a dinosaur (although there are some modern-day reptiles, like crocodiles, that give us some clues as to behaviour), so how do we know what they looked like and how they lived? We have evidence from which to work, unlike the images created of angels, where there is no fossil evidence. Bones, skin, muscle attachments, and feathers (where present) allow us to reconstruct dinosaurs and then put them into an imaginary landscape. We accept these images, and models based on them, because we believe what experts tell us (quite rightly?). The images are also informed by speculation. In Benton’s book on dinosaurs, with its catchy sub-title [2], we read that the discovery of pigment cells meant that “for the very first time, we knew the colour patterns of a dinosaur, and could use these insights to speculate about dinosaurian behaviour”. Can we really gain information about dinosaur behaviour from colour patterns? Perhaps we can. Later in the book, Benton describes the swimming of Stenopterygius, an ancient reptile from the Mesozoic: 

Stenopterygius swoops after a belemnite, an extinct relative of modern squid and octopus. The belemnite has a fleshy body and fins and swims backwards, just as modern cephalopods do. We know, too, that it has an ink sac, and so, like its modern relatives, likely squirts ink when alarmed, and zips off by blasting jets of water through its siphons. By the time the predator has recovered and snapped a few times at the ink cloud, the belemnite has long disappeared to safety. 

The Stenopterygius is not too fazed, as this is not an infrequent occurrence, and he lines up to chase another group of belemnites. 

Is the language a little flowery here? Admittedly, the book was written for a general audience, and books about dinosaurs sell well, but how critically do we, as members of the public, consider what is said by popularisers?


Further in Benton’s book [2], the dust cover of which shows Tupandactylus in flight (see above), we read this about head crests in bird-like dinosaurs: 

[It is] suggested that such prominent head crests and beaks sheathed in keratin as are seen in various dinosaurs and pterosaurs might have been photoluminescent.. ..[and] we can imagine the elaborate head crests of Tupandactylus flashing different colours at dusk, males and females perhaps showing different patterns, and putting on a spectacular in the crepuscular gloom. 

Please note the use of the words “suggested”, “imagine” and “perhaps” in this quote.

Moving images take artists’ impressions one step further and we are entertained not only by coloured images of landscapes, but also grunts and hisses from different dinosaurs. There is a good selection in the video linked in [3], (complete with an accompanying musical soundtrack to add tension to each scene). How much of this is supported by evidence? I accept that teeth marks on bones correspond to the dentition of certain dinosaurs, but the rest of it?



As we know, dinosaurs are not only important in palaeontology, but also in entertainment and in retailing. Go into any home with young children and you will find many dinosaur-related toys, pyjamas, t-shirts etc. and there is a popular fascination with mythological dinosaurs like the Loch Ness Monster and Sea Serpents. While there are artists’ impressions based on the sightings of the latter two, that is all we have to go on and the transformations of known dinosaur types that appear on clothing, or as toys, may be very far from the creatures that existed hundreds of millions of years ago. Steve Brusatte, reviewing Bentons’ book (see above) remarks that the images of dinosaurs it contains are real and can be used by media professionals, but is this so? Is there a point where palaeontologists can get a bit carried away with their liaison with the world of entertainment?

One important view of science is that it is based on falsifiable hypotheses and this is an approach that I have tried to follow in my research. However, falsifiable hypotheses are not possible with extinct animals (and plants) and, however ingenious our attempts, we are bound to make suppositions about the effects of time: we can design experiments that last hundreds of millions of years, but it is impossible to get the results. It means that palaeontology, including the study of dinosaur fossils, is a highly-informed guessing game, with some practitioners and artists going further into the world of imagination than others. Thus, the need for caution.

 

[1] Roger S. Wotton (in press) Birds and Christian Imagery. In Winged Worlds (eds. Olga Petri and Michael Guida). London, Routledge.

[2] Michael J. Benton (2021) Dinosaurs: New Visions of a Lost World. London, Thames & Hudson.

[3] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZzXGSFVbVvU&t=847s&ab_channel=BBCEarth





Friday, 26 March 2021

Why are there no bearded angels?

 

Have you ever seen a bearded angel - not in real life, but in paintings? It is a convention that both God and the adult Jesus wear beards, while angels are androgynous in appearance, wear loose-fitting, flowing robes and have bird wings (although there are a few exceptions to this, e.g. in Piero’s Nativity).


Botticini‘s (1475-1476) painting of The Assumption of the Virgin (see above – from [1]) shows Heaven as viewed above the concentric rings of the geocentric universe. In Heaven, we recognise Jesus and Mary, surrounded by rows of angels all having “colour coded” robes and wings, each row representing a category of angel as recognised by Pseudo-Dionysius the Areopagite and accepted by the Catholic Church. In ascending order these are:

Angels - pink robes: gold and black wings

Archangels - white robes: pink wings (all holding urns – my theology is so limited that I don’t know why) (It is accepted that there are three archangels, but there is reference to others in religious texts, but the number shown here is unusual).

Principalities - blue robes: black and red wings


Dominions - olive robes: red wings

Virtues - blue robes: blue and red wings

Powers - white robes: pink and olive wings

Thrones, Cherubim and Seraphim are shown as babies (cherubs) surrounding Mary and Jesus - although The Bible describes Seraphim as having six wings and Cherubim as having four wings. Is there any evidence for as many Seraphim and Cherubim as Botticini has shown?


All have their roles to play, but only Angels and Archangels leave Heaven to visit Earth, so need their wings. At first glance, we miss the other figures shown and perhaps confuse them with the angelic throng. Seated between the ranks of angels are women and both bearded and clean-shaven men. Many are clothed in monastic, or ecclesiastical, garb and have gained entry to Heaven as Saints, Old Testament figures, and persons of similar status. Adam and Eve are also here [1] (see below)




The image of angels as androgynous, winged figures emanated from 4th Century Christianity, probably using classical statues of winged goddesses as models [2], the wings being important symbols of the “flight” between Heaven and Earth. That they were bird wings, comes from our observations of birds’ power of flight and our envy of this ability. But why this accepted image? In her fascinating essay, Therese Martin [3] explains that the earliest angels in Christian Art were not winged, were also referred to as men (used as an interchangeable term), and were wrapped in brilliant light. Some wore beards and “at least one is balding” [3] and Martin explains the transition from male to androgynous, winged angels was because “angels as men were too attractive to women – and too susceptible to their female charms.” She concludes [3]:

Thus the image of the winged angel manages to combine a female model with a male nominative (“angelos”) in order to portray a creature that is spirit, not belonging to either gender. The visual form of a man with wings satisfied the perceived need in the fourth century for an angel that was neither man nor woman, neither man nor God. The winged image was a successful visual metaphor that managed to capture all the ambiguities inherent in the angelic nature and explain them in a way that has remained clearly convincing to the present day.

So convincing, that the image has remained largely unaltered for hundreds of years, while the Devil has changed markedly in appearance over the same period of time [4]. Billy Graham described angels as being sexless [5] and, while the Archangels have male names, they are still what we would now call gender neutral in appearance. With our current sensitivity to gender issues, the image fits as well now as it did in the 5th Century.

[1] https://www.nationalgallery.org.uk/paintings/francesco-botticini-the-assumption-of-the-virgin

[2] https://rwotton.blogspot.com/2016/05/angels-nike-superman-and-darth-vader.html

[3] Therese Martin (2001) The Development of Winged Angels in Early Christian Art. Espacio, Tiempo y Forma, Serie VII, Historia del Arte 14: 11-29.

[4] https://rwotton.blogspot.com/2019/08/how-devil-has-changed-through-time.html

[5] https://rwotton.blogspot.com/2017/04/angels-billy-graham-and-me.html

 

Monday, 19 August 2019

How the Devil has changed through time


Paintings allow us to see the visions of individual artists and they provide an insight into the way perceptions change through the centuries. Recently, I taught a course on “Angels and Demons” at the National Gallery in London and, while preparing the lectures, I was struck by the difference in the way that the Devil (Satan, Lucifer, etc.) was portrayed over the last 800 years. In contrast, angels were portrayed consistently as being androgynous, clothed in a loose full-length robe, and having large bird wings attached somewhere near the shoulder blade.

Here are some examples, with brief notes, of how the Devil has changed (all are details: for URLs to images of the complete works, see the end of this essay):

Duccio (1308/11) shows the Devil as being hairy and having bat wings (bats being regarded in folklore as sinister creatures of the night) and large pointed ears (below, upper) and Fra Angelico (c.1431) also portrays the Devil as being hairy, with tufted, pointed ears and small horns. It (I use “it” and not “he” or “she”) is seen eating humans, so is clearly very large, and appears to have near-human dentition (below, lower).



In Stefan Lochner’s (c.1435) vision of Hell, it is difficult to pick out the Devil as there are so many demonic figures of different kinds (and remember that this work was painted before the well-known works of Hieronymus Bosch). If the figure in the lower right is the Devil, it is noticeable for appearing hairy, with two horns, pointed ears, a non-human face and pronounced canine teeth. Interestingly, a second visage is present in the groin region and this appears to be a replica of the “proper” head (below).


The Devil in Bermejo’s (1468) painting has many sharp teeth, a prominent tongue, pointed ears and horns. It also has three-fingered hands emerging from serpent arms and bright, jewel-like nipples that resemble the eyes. The wings are part bat-like and part like those of a butterfly; the one leg that is clearly visible emerges from the mouth of a serpent; and the abdomen has a second, toothed mouth from which a snake is slithering (below).


Pacher’s (1471-75) Devil has bat-like wings anchored at the shoulder blade and its legs bear cloven hooves. Most of the body is human-like, as are the arms and hands, but the head is grotesque, with prominent teeth, an upturned snout, horns and large ears. Interestingly, a second face is shown, with prominent eyes and mouth and having the tail for a nose. The presence of this second visage is something shred with the previous two examples (below, and compare to the images above).


In Crivelli’s (c.1476) painting, the Devil is dark-coloured but humanoid, except for the feet, hands, bat wings and the presence on the head of horns and long, pointed ears (below).


Apart from black bird’s wings, claws instead of feet, and small horns on the head, d’Oggiono’s (c.1510) Devil has a human form, as does Bonifacio Veronese’s (c.1530) Devil, although it clearly has human feet as well as dark brown bird wings, pointed ears, and appears to be breathing fire (both are shown below).



Guido Reni (1635) paints the Devil as a muscular man, with thinning hair and a beard; the only distinguishing feature being the presence of small bat wings on the back (below, upper). de Ries (1640s) also presents the Devil as being a human figure, but the wings are large and, unusually, those of a bird (below, lower).



Further examples of the Devil taking human form come in the painting of Delacroix (1854-61), where wings are carried on a helmet (below, upper), while Epstein’s famous sculpture at Coventry Cathedral (below, lower) shows a human form with no wings, but with horns just above the ears.



The earliest images are thus of a hairy monster, capable of ingesting people, and occasionally of quite macabre appearance, developing through time into a nude human-like figure with devilish features (sharp teeth, long and pointed ears, horns, bat’s wings, claws) and then to an often powerful-looking nude human male that has only a few of these features.

Several explanations can be put forward for the transformation of the image of the Devil through time:

1. I may have been selective in my choice of paintings and sculpture, although I tried not to be.

2. 800+ years ago we had a highly developed folklore, many superstitions and myths about creatures around us, and a fear of many things in brought into Christianity from paganism, witchcraft, etc. We retain some of these fears but, as humans became increasingly able to control the environment and gain some understanding of it, we became more and more confident in our abilities as humans. This resulted in the increasingly human form taken by images of the Devil.

3. By portraying the Devil as being human (like other angels) it shows viewers that he represents the worst side of human nature, while angels show the best side (music, protection, kindness, etc.). It is a distasteful naked human male, unlike angels who are clothed, sexless, and of universal appeal. We must watch out for the Devil at all times.


Of course, there are other possible explanations, but I wanted to keep this article short. The lectures at the National Gallery were much more detailed and wide-ranging, and they promoted lively discussions, so I hope this blog post brings a similar response..



The works of art discussed:

Duccio (1308/11) The Resurrection Duomo, Siena [sometimes labelled Descent into Hell]: https://www.wikiart.org/en/duccio/descent-into-hell-1311

Fra Angelico (c.1431) Last Judgement San Marco, Florence: https://www.wikiart.org/en/fra-angelico/last-judgment


Bartolomé Bermejo (1468) St Michael Triumphs over the Devil National Gallery: https://www.nationalgallery.org.uk/paintings/bartolome-bermejo-saint-michael-triumphs-over-the-devil

Michael Pacher (1471-75) ?Saint Augustine and the Devil Bavarian State Collection, Munich: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Michael_Pacher_004.jpg

Carlo Crivelli (c.1476) Saint Michael National Gallery: https://www.nationalgallery.org.uk/paintings/carlo-crivelli-saint-michael

Marco d’Oggiono (c.1510) The Archangels triumphing over Lucifer Pinacoteca di Brera, Milan: http://www.wikigallery.org/wiki/painting_229178/Marco-D%27Oggiono/The-Archangels-triumphing-over-Lucifer


Guido Reni (1635) The Archangel Michael defeating Satan Santa Maria della Concezione, Rome: https://www.wikiart.org/en/guido-reni/the-archangel-michael-defeating-satan-1635

Ignacio de Ries (1640s) Saint Michael the Archangel The Metropolitan Museum of Art, NewYork: https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/437729

Eugène Delacroix (1854-61) St Michael defeats the Devil Saint-Sulpice, Paris: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Eug%C3%A8ne_Delacroix_-_St_Michael_defeats_the_Devil_-_WGA06220.jpg

Jacob Epstein (1958) Saint Michael’s Victory over the Devil Coventry Cathedral: https://www.flickr.com/photos/amthomson/5686639646


Wednesday, 26 April 2017

Angels, Billy Graham and me



Like many teenagers, I went through phases of questioning my religious beliefs. Brought up as Christian, I attended the local Baptist Church with the rest of my extended family, but left when I found myself doubting some of the things that I heard and some of the behaviour that I saw. After leaving the congregation of the Baptist Church, I attended a Crusaders group and occasional meetings organised in a local theatre that were modelled on the large-scale rallies held by Billy Graham and other famous evangelists. These meetings encouraged me in my developing agnosticism, as the atmosphere was oppressively emotional and the message was all about being saved from something dreadful.

Having left Christian religious beliefs, I became opposed to those who wanted to talk to me about such matters. On one occasion, when I was away at University, a member of the Christian Union knocked on my door. I welcomed him into my room and was happy to chat about things in general, but not when he started to proselytise. That was a challenge that I couldn't resist, so I fired back with an attack on everything that he was saying to me. It is something that I now feel rather bad about but, at the time, I was pleased to be told that I was the nearest that my visitor had come to the Devil. His reaction reminded me of the warnings I had heard in the preaching of the evangelists.

Recently, I read Billy Graham's book about angels [1] and took a special interest as I have written about angels with bird wings [2,3], so familiar to us in paintings and sculptures. There is no evidence in The Holy Bible to support these images and Billy Graham confirms this (see below, upper); yet his book has a bird-winged angel on the cover (see below, lower). 



The book is an interesting read as it gives an insight into what angels mean to an evangelical Christian like Billy Graham. Here is a very small selection of quotes:

..angels are created spirit beings who can become visible when necessary. They can appear and disappear. They think, feel, will and display emotions.. ..the Bible teaches about them as oracles of God, who give divine or authoritative decisions and bring messages from God to men. To fulfill this function angels have not infrequently assumed visible human form..

..We must be aware that angels keep in close and vital contact with all that is happening on the earth. Their knowledge of earthly matters exceeds that of men. We must attest to their invisible presence and unceasing labors. Let us believe that they are here among us. They may not laugh or cry with us, but we do know they delight with us over every victory in our evangelistic endeavors.

The Bible seems to indicate that angels do not age, and never says that one was sick.. ..The holy angels will never die.

..in some cases in the Old Testament God Himself appeared in human form as an angel.

The Bible.. ..teaches that angels are sexless.

The number of angels remains constant. For the obedient angels do not die. The fallen angels will suffer the final judgement at the time God finishes dealing with them. While we cannot be certain, some scholars estimate that as many as one third of the angels cast their lot with Satan when he mysteriously rebelled against his Creator.

Nothing in Scripture says that angels must eat to stay alive. But the Bible says that on certain occasions angels in human form did indeed eat.

While it is partly speculative, I believe that angels have the capacity to employ heavenly celestial music.. .. I think before we can understand the music of heaven we will have to go beyond our earthly concept of music. I think most earthly music will seem to us to have been in the "minor key" in comparison to what we are going to hear in heaven.

You must read the whole book to gain more information and also to experience the tone that is used. It is similar to the emotive language of a Billy Graham rally and, as we see from the quotation above, is "partly speculative". One of the most important statements in the book is this:

Satan often works by interjecting a question to raise doubts. It is deadly to doubt God's Word!

I take this to mean that we shouldn't question and that is difficult for me as my training as a scientist has questioning at its heart. In reading Billy Graham's book, I was reminded repeatedly about his constant concern about Satan's influence in the World and of our need to be saved. It took me back to my experience as an undergraduate student. 

By the way, I don't believe that angels exist. That does not mean that I disrespect those that do believe in angels; rather I regard it as being a matter of personal choice. Sorry, Billy.



[1] Billy Graham (1975) Angels: God's Secret Agents. London, Hodder & Stoughton.




Monday, 26 September 2016

An explanation for religious visions?



Hallucinations are characteristic of some forms of mental illness and can be frightening, causing distress to those who endure them. They can also occur after taking hallucinogenic drugs, with the possibility of both pleasant and unpleasant "trips".

Visions are part of the lore of religions like Judaism and Christianity. These visions may result from mental illness or from drug use, but they also occur when these conditions do not apply. There may be an expectancy of seeing an angel, or the Virgin Mary, and an excited mental state may be common in these cases, but no drugs are involved and nor is mental illness. What then is the basis of these visions?

Let's begin to answer that question by looking at two visions described in the Holy Bible:

Daniel's vision [1]


Having seen a number of animals (this must have been in a dream as he was lying face down?), Daniel then recounts:

 ..there stood before me as the appearance of a man.. ..he came near where I stood: and when he came, I was afraid, and fell upon my face.. ..as he was speaking with me, I was in a deep sleep on my face towards the ground: but he touched me, and set me upright

Cornelius' vision [2]


Cornelius was a devout Christian centurion who:

..saw in a vision evidently about the ninth hour of the day an angel of God coming in to him..

I assume that the ninth hour was in daylight and that his vision was not a dream, but we have no information on his state of wakefulness.

Both these visions, and those of others, could be explained by Charles Bonnet Syndrome. Charles Bonnet was born in Geneva in 1720 and qualified as a lawyer, although he probably never practised the law [3]. He was always fascinated by Natural History and wrote papers in the field of Entomology while still training to be a lawyer, later making many contributions to Botany when his eyesight began to fail during his twenties. Bonnet could then no longer work on small-scale observation and it was not only his sight that failed - he already had hearing loss from the age of seven [3]. As someone who suffered from sensory deprivation, he became interested in this subject and the way that it influenced the incidence of visions. He studied the phenomenon in his elderly grandfather and it is from these descriptions that he is best known in the medical world.

We can describe Charles Bonnet Syndrome (CBS) as [4]:

..the occurrence of recurrent or persistent complex visual hallucinations often of a pleasant nature, which may be considered pseudohallucinations, in individuals with preserved insight and intellectual function without altered consciousness, cognitive or psychiatric disturbances, sleep disorders, or focal neurological lesions and often associated with ophthalmic pathology. CBS occurs predominantly in elderly, visually impaired people.

Further in their review, Menon and colleagues [4] state:

The typical CBS hallucination has been variously described as a sudden sharply focussed, immobile image, most often the face or figure of a person, which occurs when the patient is alert, with eyes open and vanishes spontaneously after a period of seconds.

However, there are other causes than failing eyesight for the occurrence of hallucinations [4]:

Charles Bonnet-type hallucinations have also been documented in the absence of ocular or neurological disease, in type II diabetes mellitus with normal vision, in leprosy, in association with HIV infection.. ..and in the elderly, where they can occur in the absence of apparent cause.. ..it is interesting that fatigue and disturbances of vigilance have been implicated as relevant to the emergence of hallucinations, as they are more likely to occur during states of drowsiness.

Knowing this about the incidence of CBS, does it provide an explanation for the visions of Daniel and Cornelius described above? Could the phenomenon explain other visions that are so vivid to "observers" that do not have mental illness or use drugs? The visions are certainly real to those that have them and this is not surprising if they result from the neural pathways used to interpret visual images from the eyes via the optic nerves. It is rather like a mental short-cut that accesses the processing power of the brain, without the need for a direct stimulus.


[1] http://www.kingjamesbibleonline.org/ section of Daniel Chapter 8

[2] http://www.kingjamesbibleonline.org/ Acts Chapter 10 verse 3

[3] Thomas R. Hedges Jr. (2007) Charles Bonnet, his life, and his Syndrome. Survey of Ophthalmology 52: 111-114.

[4] G. Jayakrishna Menon, Imran Rahman, Sharmila J. Menon and Gordon N. Dutton (2003) Complex visual hallucinations in the visually impaired: the Charles Bonnet Syndrome. Survey of Ophthalmology 48: 58-72.