|   Sacrum - Paintings
       Obrazy z serii Sacrum nawiązują
      do najlepszych przykładów
      arcydzieł sztuki
      światowej i są wizualną interpretacją obrazów wielkich mistrzów takich jak Rafael czy Tycjan. Obrazy te były tworzone przez prof. Z.
      Leś od 1983 do 2020 roku. Obrazy tej serii stanowią swoistą wykładnię
      teologiczną ikoniczne
      hermeneutyki opartej na badaniach nad rozumieniem w naszym instytucie SQJRIU. Nie istnieje żadne naukowe opracowanie dotyczące złożoności interpretacyjnej
      dzieł sztuki sakralnej malarstwa europejskiego w nieznacznym
      nawet stopniu ukazujące problem „profanacji”
      w odniesieniu do niekiedy
      bardzo świadomie
      montowanego „collage” zła
      w koegzystencji dobra, piękna
      spowitego zgrzybiałym
      nalotem brzydoty czy też prawdy w upiornym „uścisku” fałszu i zakłamania. Manipulatorska moc muzeów i galerii powinna przynajmniej niewielkim stopniu zostać odtajniona dzięki naukowym badaniom naszego instytutu naukowego. Komentarze do poszczególnych dzieł sztuki są „parafrazą” analiz historyków sztuki. Dla nas Katolików
      jest czymś obraźliwym
      jeżeli tak na wystawie jak i w albumie świadomie zaciera się granice między sacrum i profanum, i musimy być poddawani terrorowi ‘estetyki’ pewnych mniejszości.      1. El Greco “Holy
      Trinity”    (“Trójca Święta”) The Holy
      Trinity is one of Greco’s most popular works. In the
      painting, the dead body of Christ is seen in the arms of God (the Father)
      who is visibly broken and upset. A traditional Eastern Miter adorns the head of the Father. The dead weight
      of Jesus’ tortured and crucified body is captured perfectly as the
      elongated figure of Christ’ body is laid at an awkward angle. There is a
      dove overhead, which many interprets as the symbolic representation of
      the Holy Spirit. The painting is also populated by six grieving angels
      surrounding the scene in a ‘V’ formation and cherubims
      at Christ’s feet. The use of diverse colours in the robes emphasizes the
      contrasting range of the colour palette selected by Greco for this
      painting.   2. Tycjan
      „Madonna with Child and four saints”    („Maria z dzieciątkiem i czterema świętymi”) The painting “Madonna
      and Child with Four Saints” depicts Madonna and Child with saints:
      St John the Baptist, Paul, Mary Magdalene and Hieronymus.   3. Ivan Kramskoi „Christ in the wilderness”     (“Chrystus
      na pustyni”)    The subject
      of the picture is taken from the New Testament, the temptation of Christ
      in the desert, where He retired for 40 days after His baptism. Christ by Kramskoy does not look like a King, but a suffering,
      restless, and doubting person. There is already in His face both humility
      and acceptance of His fate. The horizon line divides the picture into two
      worlds: a cold, lifeless desert and a rising dawn. This glow of a new day
      seems to proclaim the victory of light. The tightly clenched hands of
      Christ are located exactly at the junction of the worlds — with these
      hands the new life will be created. Christ’s feet are wounded on stones,
      they make you feel as if you are touching something that hurts. Bloody
      feet bring their element to the subject; looking at them, we understand
      that the morning reflections were preceded by a sleepless night, a long
      restless way through the darkness. Dawn is coming — and this path is
      coming to its end.   4. El Greco „The
      Disrobing of Christ”     („Obnażenie Chrystusa z szat”)     The
      painting shows Christ looking up to Heaven with an expression of
      serenity; His idealized figure seems segregated from the other people and
      the violence surrounding him. A figure dressed in black in the background
      points at Christ accusingly, while two others argue over who will have
      His garments. A man in green to Christ's left holds Him firmly with a
      rope and is about to rip off His robe in preparation for his crucifixion.
      At the lower right, a man in yellow bends over the cross and drills a
      hole to facilitate the insertion of a nail to be driven through Christ's
      feet. The radiant face of the Savior is
      violently juxtaposed to the coarse figures of the executioners, who are
      amassed around Him creating an impression of disturbance with their
      movements, their gestures, and lances.   5. Jacopo Pontormo  “Deposition
      from the Cross”         (“Zdjęcie z krzyża”) This
      painting represents the transportation of Christ toward his Father’s
      merciful embrace. The colours are those seen by the mind experiencing a
      vision of God. In a whirl of brightly colored
      fabric and bodies in motion, a heavy and pale dead body that is Christ
      rests atop unstable shoulders and in unsteady hands of another man.
      Christ’s legs are draped over the shoulders of a man on tiptoes, almost
      beckoning the viewer of the altarpiece to help carry Christ’s body that
      has been heavied with sin. Mary is present in
      this work, and she can be seen slightly larger than the other figures.
      The position she is in along with her facial expression suggests that she
      is displaying the late medieval concept of “the swooning Virgin”. Her
      near petrified face looks as if she is about to faint. The lighting, the
      elongated limbs, and the over dramatic facial expressions are all typical
      of early mannerist works.   
      
       
        |      1. El Greco “Holy Trinity”                
 2. Tycjan „Madonna
        with Child and four saints”                          3. I. Kramskoj „Christ in the wilderness”                 
           
 1. El Greco „The Disrobing of Christ”                5. Pontormo “Deposition from the Cross”               |    6. Andrea
      del Sarto  “Assumption of the Virgin”     (“Wniebowzięcie Maryi Panny”)    Heaven and
      earth divide this picture into two parts. Above, the Virgin Mary ascends into
      heaven, helped by a group of angels. Below, the Apostles marvel at the
      event, as St. Thomas peers into Mary’s grave to check that her body is no
      longer in there. Saints Nicholas and Margaret kneel in front of the
      scene. The figure of the standing Apostle is serving as link between
      Heaven and earth. The
      painting is typical of the High Renaissance in its rigid
      composition.     7. Govanni Bellini  “Madonna with
      Saints“     (“Madonna
      z Dzieciątkiem i
      Świętymi”) In this
      painting the Virgin sits enthroned with the infant Jesus lifting His
      little hands to bless to worshipers. An angel at the foot of the altar
      softly plays the violin, while the saints stand quietly at either side of
      the throne. St. Peter with his key and book, St Catherine with the palm
      of martyrdom and the broken wheel, St Lucy and St Jerome, the scholar who
      translated the Bible into Latin, and whom Bellini therefore represented
      as reading a book. Bellini’s Madonna is painted with a great dignity and
      repose in comparison to many Madonnas with saints
      who have been painted before and after.   
         8. Rafael “The
      Sistine Madonna”     (“Madonna Sykstyńska“) In the
      painting the Madonna, holding the Christ Child and flanked by Saint Sixtus and Saint Barbara, stands on clouds before
      dozens of obscured putti, while two distinctive winged putti rest on
      their elbows beneath her. A prominent element within the painting, the
      winged angels beneath Mary are famous in their own right. The angels of
      this nature are known as putti.  Raphael's use
      of the curtain in this picture invoked a device that had been employed by
      a number of the Old Masters as a trompe-l'oeil way of drawing the viewer
      into the composition, pointing to the artifice of the scene, and also
      showcasing their own ability to paint something as lifelike as the
      drapery hanging in front of a picture.   
      
       
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 6. Andrea del Sarto “Assumption of the Virgin”              
           
 7. G. Bellini “Madonna with Saints“                  8. Rafael “The
        Sistine Madonna”     |      BIBLICAL SCENES    1. Pieter
      Bruegel the Older “The Fall of the Rebel Angels”      (“Upadek
      zbuntowanych aniołów”)  “The Fall
      of the Rebel Angels” depicts the most powerful angel
      along with the other fallen angels that have been banished from heaven.
      Angels are falling from the sun in a stacked manner along with ungodly
      creatures, presented in the grotesque, ugly or distorted, half-human and
      half-apocalyptic form/shape. that Bruegel created.   The work
      details the first confrontation between Good and Evil, even before the
      Fall of Man, when the most powerful angel turns upon the divine
      authority.    2. Pieter
      Bruegel the Older „The Babel
      Tower”        (“Wieża
      Babel”)  The vast,
      partially constructed tower dominates the painting “The Tower of
      Babel”. Surrounding the structure is a landscape dotted with tiny
      figures, some of whom march in procession around its curving stories,
      while others toil at the scaffolds along its sides. To the right, ships
      unload building materials; in every respect of detail, the painting is
      minutely, naturalistically accurate.  The paining
      was created around the Biblical tale of the Towe of Babel. In so doing,
      Bruegel chose a story intended to provide a moral directive around the
      dangers of over-reaching ambition. 
         
      
       
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 1. Pieter Breugel
        the Elder “The Fall of the Rebel Angels”                     2. Pieter Breugel the Elder „The Babel Tower”   |      SAINTS 1. Hieronymus
      Bosch  “The Temptation of St.
      Anthony”     (“Kuszenie
      św. Antoniego”) The
      Temptation of St. Anthony depicts his trials in different
      stages. St. Anthony is a heroic representation of man faced with various
      ugly demons with bodies made from vegetables, animal, human and lifeless
      parts. Such monstrous creatures typify Bosch's artworks and The
      Temptation of St Anthony is his greatest example of the
      consequences faced by sinners in the depths of Hell. The
      background landscape is conveyed with acute detail which adds to the
      terrifying tone of this work and enforces the reality of Hell awaiting
      those who have deviated from God and all that is good. The artist's
      portrayal of man's struggle against temptation and the omnipresence of
      the Devil is one of the best examples of his personal iconography.   
      
       
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 1. Hieronymus Bosch “The Temptation of St.
        Anthony”        
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