Mary Magdalene is considered the first woman to follow Jesus and serve
him. She witnessed the crucifixion of Jesus, his descent from the Cross,
entombment and resurrection. She was the first to pass the good news to his
followers. She was regarded as a sinner due to a mistake made by Pope Gregory
the Great.
Matevž Langus (Kamna Gorica, 1792 – Ljubljana, 1855) depicted St Mary
Magdalene at least eight times. Mary Magdalene is the most often pictured woman
saint after Mother Mary. Most of Langus’ depictions follow the iconographic
tradition of treating Mary Magdalene as a sinner and a repentant. In three
instances he presents the saint on her own, while he included her into
multi-figural scenes of the Crucifixion and St Mary’s Assumption five times.
The depictions are more intimate in oil and more monumental in fresco
technique; we also know of preparatory studies in graphite in sketch books.
This points to the constant presence of the saint’s image in Langus’ body of
work, in different patron circles and in the collective memory of the first
half of the 19th century.
The image of Mary Magdalene from 1846, kept at the National Gallery of
Slovenia (NG S 191), is the most emotionally expressive among Langus’ depiction
of the penitent sinner. Swollen teary face, mouth open in ecstasy, eyes turned
upwards and sensual depiction of hair falling across her hand and cleavage
remind us of depictions by Guido Reni (1575–1642), a Baroque painter from
Bologna. Reni perfected the typical rapturous images of saints looking towards
the sky, with his pictures of Mary and Magdalene proving especially
influential. Following the instructions of the Conter-Reformation exegesis and
the Tridentine Decree on holy images, Reni recognized the ideal female beauty
and perfection in the images of Mary Magdalene. He painted around a dozen
versions of St Magdalene. They all share the idealized sensuality of the young
saint, while differing in details such as hand gestures, the gaze, composition
and background. Reni’s Magdalenes are thus a symbol of devoted prayer, deep
contemplation and spiritual ecstasy.
The Gallery’s St Mary Magdaleneby Langus leans on Reni’s St Magdalene in
Prayer in composition and colour; the picture was kept in Louvre, Paris
until 1897 and is now in Musée des beaux–arts, Quimper. As in Reni’s work, so is Langus’ Magdalene
also placed before the rocky shelter in nature. Reni’s Magdalene is clothed in
elaborately folded yet simple mantle, while Langus painted the saint in modern
clothes. The saint’s conspicuous tears and spread-out hair allowed Langus to
intensify the emotions up to the pathetic level and gave the picture a number
of penitent connotations. From her regular attributes he selects a skull,
placing it in Magdalene’s right hand as a reminder of the transience of life, a
vessel of ointment, and a cross in the background. Absent the halo Magdalene’s
image seems rather secular, leading us to assume that the picture was meant for
private devotion. This conclusion can be supported by a more formally presented
Magdalene in Langus’ picture for the mensa of the side altar in the Franciscan
Church of St Jacob in Kamnik. In the monastic, preaching milieu the picture of
the saint had to be more seemly and include a halo, a book and a whip.
Both mentioned oil paintings are reductions of a fresco that Langus
painted in the nave of the Parish Church of St Martin in Šmartno under Šmarna
gora in 1841. The fully-figured St Magdalene there is in rapture in the middle
of a rocky landscape and the central figure of the ambitiously-planned
illusionistic altar. The fresco is one of Langus’ earliest works of this kind
and was supported as a part of a strategy by the Prince Bishop of Ljubljana
Anton Alojzij Wolf (1782–1859) for the renewal of the Church. For the
consecration of the church in Šmartno, the bishop financed these fresco
decorations of the altars. The importance of the commission is evident also by
the drawings in Langus’ sketchbook, kept by the Gallery (NG G 137). In it, we
find several compositional sketches and coloured jottings that the painter used
to design his fresco painting and his later images of St Magdalene in oil.
Author
Kristina Preininger
2 September–6 October 2021
National Gallery of Slovenia
Prešernova 24
1000 Ljubljana