![]() He discovers in them a message.one he even conveys to a skeptical assemblage of his professional peers in place of the case studies he had prepared. David McBride, a psychiatrist and analyst, in time views both paintings, one habitually exhibited in his native England and the other in Italy. But both paintings depict Jesus fulfilling his promise that "where two or three gather in my name, there will I be also." As Luke, chapter 24 informs, when the disciples recognize their master, he "vanishes," and the two remind each other that their hearts were "burning inside us as he talked to us on the road." The other picture places a sparer repast on the table and Jesus looks as though the sufferings of his life had stamped his post-crucifixion countenance too. In one, Caravaggio puts a small feast before them and portrays Jesus with a youthful face. ![]() ![]() ![]() (Reviewed by Kirstin Merrihew NOV 24, 2007)Ĭaravaggio painted two versions of the risen Christ in Supper at Emmaus with two disciples after he had walked and talked with them unrecognized along the road. Over to read a review of Dancing Backwards) ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |