"I bring him forth to you, that ye may know
I find no fault in him. Behold the man!"
The words of Pilate
in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's Ecce Homo
* * *
As noted in a previous post, the Palazzo Pitti in Florence is a massive structure housing 1000 rooms of paintings, sculptures and more. Every room has paintings on its domed ceilings as well as stunning art on its walls. Look up as you walk the hallways lined with sculptures on pedestals. Every ceiling is a mini Sistine Chapel.
I mention all this because, like my visit to the National Gallery in Parma, and the Uffizi on the East side of the Arno River, it isn't long before one's senses become anesthetized by it all.
And yet, even while in this benumbed state, there are encounters in which your jaw drops, your mind snaps to alertness, and you find yourself unexpectedly and profoundly moved. That was the feeling that swept over me when I came around a corner and stood face to face with Antonio Ciseri's Ecce Homo.
I was familiar with the painting because it is one of the paintings that was used as an illustration in the 1954 Revised Standard Version of the Bible that I received after my fourth grade Sunday school year. When you look at a reproduction little larger than a post card, you have no idea regarding the scale of what you are seeing.
The actual painting is oil on canvas, more than 13 feet wide and 9 feet tall. It purportedly took Ciseri twenty years (1871-1891) to complete. Its size alone makes it striking. The composition and execution are superb. (The image at the top of this page is a detail of the central portion as you can see below.)
Ecce Homo (Behold the Man) -- 13.7' x 9' |
What this painting depicts is a scene in the life of Jesus, as recorded in the New Testament. The man in the white robe with outstretched arm is Pontius Pilate, the fifth Roman prefect of Judaea, who served under Emperor Tiberius from 26 to 36 AD. He's best known, however, for being the official who presided over the trial of Jesus and ultimately ordered his crucifixion. There were other controversial aspects of his career while ruling in Judaea, but the most significant is the one depicted here, the trial and crucifixion of Jesus.
This National Geographic was on the magazine stand at the Florence airport the day I left Italy to fly home. |
Ciseri portrays Jesus on Pilate's left, stripped to the waist and wearing a crown of thorns after being mocked and flogged. This critical moment in both of their lives is described in all four Gospel narratives, though the statement "Behold the man" is only found in John's account. In response, the crowd--as can be seen in the painting--has been stirred into a frenzy, shouting, "Crucify! Crucify!" and "We have no king but Caesar!"
Ecce Homo--Caravaggio (1605-1610) |
Ecce Homo--Ludovico Cardi, 1607 |
Christ before Pilate --1881 Mihaly Munkacsy |
**According to ChatGPT, the historical records do not provide us with the name of Pontius Pilate's wife. The New Testament of the Bible, specifically the Gospel of Matthew, mentions that Pilate's wife sent him a message while he was presiding over the trial of Jesus, urging him to have nothing to do with "that righteous man" because she had suffered greatly in a dream because of him (Matthew 27:19).
Related Links
Tennyson's Ecce Homo
https://www.poetrynook.com/poem/8-ecce-homo
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