Between the Text and the Canvas: The Bible and Art in Dialogue
J. Cheryl Exum, Ela Nutu
Sheffield Phoenix Press, 2007 - 246 pages
 

Can
 a painting or illustration of a biblical scene help readers understand 
the Bible? Conversely, to what extent can knowledge about a biblical 
story help viewers appreciate an artist's portrayal of it? Interpreting 
biblical art is more than a matter of asking whether or not an artist 
'got it right' or 'got it wrong'. This lively collection of essays seeks
 to establish a dialogue between the Bible and art that sees the 
biblical text and artistic representations of it as equal conversation 
partners. By looking at texts and canvases from different angles, the 
nine contributors to the volume reveal how biblical interpretation can 
shed important light on art, how art can contribute significantly to 
biblical interpretation and how each has something distinctive to offer 
to the interpretative task. Contributions include J. Cheryl Exum on 
Solomon de Bray's Jael, Deborah and Barak, Hugh S. Pyper on depictions 
of the relationship between David and Jonathan, Martin O'Kane on the 
biblical Elijah and his visual afterlives, Christina Bucher on the Song 
of Songs and the enclosed garden motif in fifteenth-century paintings 
and engravings of Mary and the infant Jesus, Ela Nutu on differences in 
the way female and male artists have represented Judith, Christine E. 
Joynes on visualizations of Salome's dance, Heidi J. Hornik on Michele 
Tosini's Nativity, Way to Calvary and Crucifixion as visual narratives, 
Kelly J. Baker on Henry Ossawa Tanner's The Annunciation and Nicodemus, 
and Christopher Rowland on William Blake and the New Testament.
 
 
 
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