The Holy Virgin Mary

This article is about the painting by Chris Ofili. For Mary, mother of Jesus, see Mary (mother of Jesus).

The Holy Virgin Mary is a painting created by Chris Ofili in 1996. It was one of the works included in the Sensation exhibition in London, Berlin and New York in 1997–2000. The subject of the work, and its execution, caused considerable controversy in New York, with Rudolph Giuliani – then Mayor of New York City – describing Ofili's work as "sick".[1] In 1998, Ofili was the first black artist to be awarded the Turner Prize. The painting was sold for £2.9 million ($4.6 million) in June 2015.

Description

External images
The Holy Virgin Mary

On a yellow-orange background, the large painting (8 feet high and 6 feet wide) depicts a black woman wearing a blue robe, a traditional attribute of the Virgin Mary. The work employs mixed media, including oil paint, glitter, and polyester resin, and also elephant dung, map pins and collaged pornographic images. The central Black Madonna is surrounded by many collaged images that resemble butterflies at first sight, but on closer inspection are photographs of female genitalia; an ironic reference to the putti that appear in traditional religious art. A lump of dried, varnished elephant dung forms one bared breast, and the painting is displayed leaning against the gallery wall, supported by two other lumps of elephant dung, decorated with coloured pins: the pins on the left are arranged to spell out "Virgin" and the one on the right "Mary". Many other works by Ofili in this period – including No Woman No Cry – incorporate elephant dung, particularly as supports for the canvas, inspired by a period that Ofili spent in Zimbabwe.[2]

Ofili has described his confusion, as an altar boy, at the idea the Virgin Mary giving birth, and has described his painting as a hip hop version of traditional Old Master paintings of the Virgin Mary. He has also emphasized the importance of the work depicting a Black Madonna.[3]

Reception

The painting was made in 1996 and it was bought by Charles Saatchi that year. It was included in the Sensation exhibition in London in 1997 and Berlin in 1998.[4]

The mixture of the sacred (Virgin Mary) and the profane (excrement and pornography) became a cause of controversy when the Sensation exhibition moved to New York in 1999. The City of New York and Mayor Rudolph Giuliani brought a court case against the Brooklyn Museum, with Giuliani describing the exhibition of Ofili's work as "sick" and "disgusting". Giuliani attempted to withdraw the annual $7 million City Hall grant from the museum, and threatened it with eviction. The museum resisted Giuliani's demands, and its director, Arnold L. Lehman, filed a federal lawsuit against Giuliani for a breach of the First Amendment. The museum eventually won the court case.[5]

Giuliani was reported as claiming that Ofili had thrown elephant dung at a painting of the Virgin Mary: "The idea of having so-called works of art in which people are throwing elephant dung at a picture of the Virgin Mary is sick."[6] The press also reported that the painting was "smeared", "splattered" or "stained" with dung.[7][8] Ofili, raised as a Roman Catholic commented that "elephant dung in itself is quite a beautiful object."[9] Other people doubted about the sincerity of these explanations, such as Carol Becker, who commented: "One has to question the sincerity of an artist like Chris Ofili, who in interviews presented the Holy Virgin Mary as nothing that should offend".[10]

The work was protected by a plexiglass screen, but was damaged when Dennis Heiner smeared white paint over the canvas on 16 December 1999. Heiner was charged with second-degree criminal mischief, and received a conditional discharge and a $250 fine. Scott LoBaido, an artist from Staten Island, was arrested on 30 September 1999 for throwing horse manure at the museum. He accused Chris Ofili's work of "Catholic bashing". Museum guards protecting the painting were quoted as saying: "It's not the Virgin Mary. It's a painting."[11]

A planned exhibition at the National Gallery of Australia in Canberra in 2000 was cancelled after the US controversy.

The painting was bought by David Walsh in 2007. It was included in Ofili's mid-career retrospective at Tate Britain in 2010.[1][12] From 2011, it was exhibited at Walsh's Museum of Old and New Art in Hobart, Tasmania – the largest private art museum in the Southern Hemisphere.[13]

It was sold at auction by Christie's in London on 30 June 2015, realizing a hammer price of £2,882,500 ($4.6 million), an auction record for the artist.[14][15]

References

  1. 1 2 Chris Ofili's The Holy Virgin Mary returns to London, Gareth Harris, The Daily Telegraph, 28 January 2010
  2. Hillary steps into dung art row, BBC News, 28 September 1999
  3. Catalogue entry, Christie's, 30 June 2015
  4. The man from Mona, Christie's, 22 June 2015
  5. Speaking Freely: Trials of the First Amendment, Floyd Abrams, Penguin, 2006, ISBN 0-14-303675-0, pp. 188–230
  6. Sensation sparks New York storm, BBC News, 23 September 1999
  7. Judging the image: art, value, law, Alison Young, Routledge, 2005, ISBN 0-415-30184-X, pp. 38–41
  8. Feminine look: sexuation, spectatorship, subversion, Jennifer Friedlander, SUNY Press, 2008 ISBN 0-7914-7295-7, p. 88
  9. Whiff of sensation hits New York, The Daily Telegraph, 2 October 1999
  10. Messing with the Sacred., Caroldbecker.com, 2011
  11. Chris Ofili's Holy Virgin Mary, Jerry Saltz, artnet (reprinted from Man in the Middle, Village Voice, 1999)
  12. Chris Ofili at Tate Britain, Jackie Wullschlager, Financial Times, 29 January 2010
  13. Chthonic and iconic, Peter Hill, Times Higher Education, 24 February 2011
  14. Ofili’s Madonna Sets Record at Christie’s $150.3 Million Sale , Bloomberg, 30 June 2015
  15. Six artist world records set in London, Christie's, 30 June 2015

External links

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