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  1. Because of this association, Mary was usually depicted as having long hair in medieval art. Naturally, a woman always depicted with long, flowing hair is a good choice for hairdressers to adopt as a patron saint.

  2. Apr 21, 2023 · If she embodied the “sinful” side of her complex persona, the Magdalene’s hair is elegantly coiffed and decorated with jewels, flowers, and ribbons. Her long flowing hair signifies the invocation to her as a “holy virgin” in the texts of the Early Church Fathers and in the Litany of the Saints.

  3. In medieval depictions Mary's long hair entirely covers her body and preserves her modesty (supplemented in some German versions such as one by Tilman Riemenschneider by thick body hair), [240] [241] but, from the sixteenth century, some depictions, like those by Titian, show part of her naked body, the amount of nudity tending to increase in ...

  4. Apr 30, 2022 · 1390s: A portrait of St. Mary Magdalene with her ointment jar and flowing blond hair is included in the right wing of Cenni di Francesco's Coronation of the Virgin Altarpiece. 1440s: Fra Angelico's Noli Me Tangere in a Franciscan friar's cell.

  5. Aug 20, 2020 · The Renaissance iconography of Mary Magdalene is depicted as covered in long hair from head to toe. So why a revered saint was portrayed with long hair all over her body?

  6. In search of salvation, the Magdalene by Angelino Medoro looks up. Her long blonde hair is associated with her passed sexual work, but also with a scene from her life in which she washes...

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  8. They are spoken by Mary Magdalene, the reformed prostitute who became one of Christ's closest female followers. Here we see the moment of her conversion, viewed incredulously by a crowd of revellers as she pulls a garland of roses from her long, flowing hair.

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