The Body of Christ and the Embodied Viewer in Rubens’s Rockox Epitaph

Author:

Grimmett Kendra1

Affiliation:

1. Department of the History of Art, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA

Abstract

On behalf of the Catholic Church, the Council of Trent (1545–1563) confirmed the usefulness of religious images and multisensory worship practices for engaging the bodies and the minds of congregants, and for moving pious devotees to empathize with Christ. In the center panel of the Rockox Epitaph (c. 1613–1615), a funerary triptych commissioned by the Antwerp mayor Nicolaas Rockox (1560–1640) and his wife Adriana Perez (1568–1619) to hang over their tomb, Peter Paul Rubens (1577–1640) paints an awe-inspiring, hopeful image of the Risen Lord that alludes to the promise of humankind’s corporeal resurrection at the Last Judgment. In the wings, Rockox and Perez demonstrate affective worship with prayer aids and welcome onlookers to gaze upon Christ’s renewed body. Rubens’s juxtaposition of the eternal, incorruptible body of Jesus alongside five mortal figures—the two patrons and the three apostles, Peter, Paul, and John—prompted living viewers to meditate on their relationship with God, to compare their bodies with those depicted, and to contemplate their own embodiment and mortality. Ultimately, the idealized body of Christ reminds faithful audiences of both the corporeal renewal and the spiritual salvation made possible through Jesus’s death and resurrection.

Funder

the Belgian American Educational Foundation (BAEF), the Rubenianum, the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, and the University of Pennsylvania

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Materials Science

Reference93 articles.

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3. Barclay, Katie, and Reddan, Bronwyn (2019). The Feeling Heart in Medieval and Early Modern Europe: Meaning, Embodiment, and Making, Medieval Institute Publications (MIP). Studies in Medieval and Early Modern Culture.

4. Baudouin, Frans (2005). Rubens in Context: Selected Studies: Liber Memorialis, Centrum voor de Vlaamse Kunst van de 16e en de 17e eeuw.

5. Benay, Erin E., and Rafanelli, Lisa M. (2015). Faith, Gender and the Senses in Italian Renaissance and Baroque Art: Interpreting the Noli Me Tangere and Doubting Thomas, Ashgate. Visual Culture in Early Modernity.

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