Monday, June 29, 2026

Precious Blood Art Series: Crivelli

 

This is Carlo Crivelli's St Francis with the Blood of Christ. It is from the late 15th century and is a small tempera on gold panel (roughly 8 by 6-1/2 inches).  It is believed to have been used as a private devotional object by a Franciscan friar.  One can see many instruments of Christ's Passion in various locations in the artwork.

This painting can be found in the Museo Poldi Pezzoli in Milan, Italy.

Sunday, June 28, 2026

Precious Blood Art Series: Bellini

This is the 15th century artwork The Blood of the Redeemer by Giovanni Bellini.  It is tempera on panel, measures 19 inches by 13.5 inches and is found in the National Gallery in London.

There are many interesting features to this painting.  First, Christ's appearance is very youthful, bringing to mind the theology of Jesus being the "new Adam".  This might well be something like how Adam looked before the Fall in the Garden of Eden.

Also, I found my eye drawn to the two trees on top of the distant mountain.  Upon researching, I discovered that these trees are interpreted as the Tree of Life and the Tree of Death, which fits with the "new Adam" perspective. 

And on the left there is a path leading to a church or should I say to the Church.  In short, there is much to see and reflect on in this painting, which some believe might have originally been the cover to a tabernacle.

Friday, June 26, 2026

The Rose and the Precious Blood of Christ


In the traditional calendar, next Wednesday, July 1, is the Feast of the Most Precious Blood of Our Lord Jesus Christ. Many of us will pray the Litany of the Precious Blood daily throughout the month of July and will honor this aspect of Our Divine Savior in some special way in the sacred spaces in our homes.

While many Catholics are aware of the symbolism of the rose in relation to the Virgin Mary, fewer may be aware that Our Lord's Precious Blood is also symbolized by the rose:
"Albert Magnus . . wrote of 'the rose made red by the blood of Christ in his passion' and described Christ as the rose of Jericho blossoming in the resurrection,' A popular guide to rosary devotion similarly alluded to the rosary as crimson 'because the Precious Blood of Our Lord has fallen upon it.' In medieval texts, 'Christ is the rosebush,' 'each drop of his precious blood is like one of its blossoms,' his blood is 'rose colored,' and his wounds correspond to the rose's petals' . The rose represents Christ's wounded sacred heart, the cup that collects his spilled blood and the resurrection as a blood-red blossoming out of death."
A relationship between Christ's blood and the rose is also found in the title and first line of Joseph Mary Plunkett's poem, I See His Blood Upon the Rose.

Source:
The quoted material is from Graziano, Frank; Wounds of Love (Oxford University Press U.S., New York, 2004); p. 72. (Please note that this book on the whole is NOT recommended as it presents a distorted view of St. Rose of Lima.)

Image:
Rose bush from Wikimedia Commons. Some rights reserved.