The Bakersfield Californian

Scholar unpacks significan­ce of 1877 stained-glass window depicting Jesus as Black

- BY VIRGINIA RAGUIN

Astained-glass window, donated in 1877 to a church in Rhode Island, shows Jesus as a dark-skinned man. Most Western depictions portrayed him as a European, with light skin and sometimes even with blue eyes. A Black Jesus at this time was unknown.

Now in the Memphis Brooks Museum of Art, the window was made by the studio of Henry Sharp, a prominent 19th-century American stained-glassmaker who was popular with Episcopal congregati­ons. Sharp’s first three windows for the now-closed

St. Mark’s Episcopal Church in Warren, Rhode Island, were of solitary white male figures, including one of Christ as “Salvator Mundi,” or Savior of the World. Christ is rigid, staring fixedly and holding an orb, a symbol of worldly power.

The Black Jesus window is different — instead of depicting a singular saintly figure, the 12-by-5-foot window tells a full narrative. It depicts scenes of Jesus speaking with women who also have dark brown skin.

As a scholar of images, I believe that the window speaks about equality, not only of race, but of gender, class and ethnicity.

The scenes were based on two Bibles published in the 1860s, illustrate­d by the German artist Julius Schnorr von Carolsfeld and the French artist Gustave Doré. Von Carolsfeld provided the model for the first scene, when Jesus visits his friends for dinner — two sisters named Mary and Martha and their brother Lazarus.

In the Gospel of Luke, Christ criticizes Martha for being preoccupie­d with preparatio­n for receiving guests and praises Mary, sitting immobile at his feet so that she can listen. In the window, however, service and contemplat­ion are equally praised. Christ looks directly at Martha standing and Mary sitting. Like the medieval monastic model of “ora et labora,” or prayer and labor — both seen as complement­ary elements of society.

In a second image on the same window, Christ speaks with a Samaritan woman alone, which, during that time, men were not supposed to do. Additional­ly, the Samaritans, an ethnic group living in the Middle East, were viewed at the time by the Jews as different and inferior. Christ, however, asks her for water and tells her that he is Son of God, the Messiah.

I, along with other conservato­rs who have examined the window, found the dark paint used for the skin color authentic and not a result of any deteriorat­ion, which can have a darkening effect on paintings over time. This color skin, as far as art historians know, was not used in any other window before this time.

The donor, a woman named Mary P. Carr, honored the memory of two women whom she named in the inscriptio­n. One, Ruth Bourne DeWolf, had married John DeWolf, a descendant of the Bristol family that had built its great fortune through transport of enslaved Africans. She and Hannah Gibbs, the other woman named, gave money to the American Colonizati­on Society that supported the passage of free Africans to Africa.

Carr’s commission dates to the same year of the U.S. Congress’ Compromise of 1877, which effectivel­y ended post-Civil War Reconstruc­tion. I argue that this was not a coincidenc­e but that Carr intended the window as a protest against the segregatio­n laws being enacted that led to the era of “Jim Crow” in Southern states. She also wanted to seek more respect for women’s work.

The window not only depicts women at work but shows Jesus directly talking respectful­ly to these women as they are working.

Virginia Raguin is a professor of art history at College of the Holy Cross. The Conversati­on is an independen­t and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts. The Conversati­on is wholly responsibl­e for the content.

 ?? MARK PRATT / AP FILE ?? The nearly 150-year-old stained-glass church window in Rhode Island that depicts a dark-skinned Jesus Christ interactin­g with women in New Testament scenes found a new home earlier this year at the Memphis Brooks Museum of Art in Tennessee.
MARK PRATT / AP FILE The nearly 150-year-old stained-glass church window in Rhode Island that depicts a dark-skinned Jesus Christ interactin­g with women in New Testament scenes found a new home earlier this year at the Memphis Brooks Museum of Art in Tennessee.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States