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  1. Jan 31, 2020 · This beautiful volume shows how the women of Scripture have been variously portrayed in art and literature throughout the centuries - even as it reinterprets these portrayals for people today. Here are the great women of the Bible, from Eve to Mary, as portrayed by artists from the early Christian period to the present day.

  2. Mar 4, 2022 · You have a series of four paintings about Mary Magdalene. Can you talk about how her story is relevant today? This series was commissioned by a woman named Rita L. Houlihan.

  3. For centuries, art has portrayed biblical women in ways that reflect society’s attitudes towards women and their role. Depictions of female biblical figures fluctuate according to historical and social perceptions. Jewish art often features heroic and worthy women who, through their courageous deeds, helped to triumph over Israel’s enemies.

    • Harriet Powers
    • Edmonia Lewis
    • Sister Gertrude Morgan and Minnie Evans
    • Kara Walker
    • Mary L. Proctor
    • The Invitation

    Powers was born a slave in Georgia and later gaining her freedom, she created a series of quilts in the late 1800s which reflected her particular interest in biblical heroes who overcame great obstacles, such as Noah, Moses, Jonah, and Job. This appliqué textile design technique was imported from West Africa as a storytelling device and was an impo...

    Edmonia Lewis was one of these artists. Lewis is the only Black woman to be widely accepted as a professional American artist in the nineteenth century, and she spent most of her career living in Rome, Italy. Lewis’s story is remarkable for the unmatched obstacles she faced due to prejudice against her gender, race, and poverty. Lewis overcame all ...

    Many Black folk artists emerged in the 1900s, including Minnie Evans and Gertrude Morgan. These artists, although formally untrained, created art to communicate their faith and emphasize their personal encounters with the divine. Many of these artists’ works are now displayed in prominent museums throughout the US. Sister Gertrude Morgan answered h...

    Kara Walker’s artwork deals with issues of oppression, racism, gender, sexuality, and the impact slavery has had on the Black American experience of faith in her work. In her ink piece entitled Christ’s Entry into Journalism (click to see this piece), Walker employs a play on words and merges together images of Jesus’s entry into Jerusalem with Ame...

    In a vibrant and unique style, Mary Proctor picks up on the long tradition of folk art to tell stories from her own experience as a Black woman in America. She often employs Christian themes in her art, refers to herself as “Missionary Mary,” and is a self-taught visionary who is inspired by God to create and promote the truth. She reports hearing ...

    By taking a quick look back at the contributions of these artists, we are able to gain a greater appreciation of the unique voices being expressed, how they call our attention to injustice, current and historical, and their invitation for us to engage in the tension of their realities, embracing faith while living through oppression. These female a...

  4. Kasebier created a Marian trilogy with the production of Blessed Art Thou among Women (1899) (figure 26.5), The Manger (1899), and The Heritage of Motherhood (1904). The photographs interpret scenes from the New Testament that feature three scenes from Mary’s life: the Annunciation, Nativity, and Crucifixion.

    • Kristin Schwain
  5. Holofernes is described in the Bible text as being in a drunken stupor, but in this painting he seems horrifyingly aware of what is happening to him; Caravaggio was the leading master of chiaroscuro, a method of bringing figures or scenes to life as they emerge from a dark, barely discernible background

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  7. These stories have inspired some of the most memorable and powerful images in the history of art, from the epic landscapes of the Hudson River School to the dynamic and emotional sculptures of Auguste Rodin.