Wednesday, July 31, 2024

Paris: Archetypes, Icons, Idolatry

An impassioned discussion has arisen around the world over a part of the opening ceremonies of the Paris Olympics last weekend. One of the staged scenes along the Seine where the athletes of each nation were being ferried to the stadium included a line of drag performers posing shoulder-to-shoulder on a bridge before turning it into a fashion-forward catwalk. Later, those same actors celebrated over a meal where the dish was revealed to be a nearly nude man painted blue.

It was a scene that left a lot of viewers puzzled. Ceremony designer Thomas Jolly explained on the official Olympics Games X account that it was an “interpretation of the Greek God Dionysus” that “makes us aware of the absurdity of violence between human beings.” [Stephanie Kaloi, Paris Olympics Producers Say ‘The Last Supper’ Inspired That Opening Ceremony Scene: ‘Many Have Done It Before,’ The Wrap, July 28, 2024, found at https://www.thewrap.com/paris-olympics-producers-last-supper-inspired-opening-ceremony/

In all honesty, even that explanation still left a lot of us puzzled.


A Lot of Us Saw the Similarities

I have to admit that when I first saw the scene, I immediately thought it looked awfully similar to Da Vinci’s Last Supper. Unlike the famous masterpiece that more resembles a staged class photo than a meal, this was a live tableau that included drag queens and actors posing as characters from Greek mythology. But the resemblance was enough to stop me in my tracks, wondering what in the world these folks were doing and what it had to do with the Olympics.

Clearly, I was not the only one who saw that resemblance. Christian conservatives around the world beginning with Catholic prelates in France almost immediately began objecting to what they saw as profanation of a sacred icon. Predictably, some employed the tired “God is not mocked” meme preferred by fundamentalists which inevitably exposes an unconscious idolatry confusing a given human depiction of the Holy with the Holy itself.

 

Leonardo Da Vinci, Last Supper, c. 1495–1498

As is my habit, when I encounter a controversy like this, I research it. My goal is to try to understand what I am seeing rather than coming to a quick judgment. Most debated issues have more than one angle to be considered and sometimes, though not always, the truth lies somewhere between opposing sides, each of which believe only they could possibly be right.

Given the reference to Greek mythology by the creators of this scene, I spent some time uncovering some of the classical Greek images that may have inspired the French display. Along the way, I discovered an angle I had not considered before.

Leonardo Da Vinci painted The Last Supper as a mural on the wall above the refectory of the Dominican convent of Santa Maria delle Grazie in Milan. He is often described as a polymath, a human being talented in a wide range of skills and, in Da Vinci’s case, curious about a wide range of aspects of the world in which he lived.

He was also a man of his times, the Italian Renaissance, which sought to simultaneously revive the classical virtues of the Greek and Roman eras as well as to combine those virtues with a Christianity just emerging from both the highly cognitive scholasticism of the elite as well as the common superstitions of the Middle Ages. Da Vinci was adept at portraying images from Greek mythology, some of which he produced for paying patrons. Many of these images would influence the Christian imagery he would create.


Archetypes Expressed Through Cultural Lenses

That’s hardly surprising.

Carl Jung spoke of a collective unconscious in which all human beings share from which archetypal imagery that has spoken to humanity over time has emerged. While archetypes essentially remain the same over time, they are expressed through the lens of the cultures in which they appear. For example, the archetype of the holy Mother and sacred child has appeared in images beloved around the world: Guan Yin, bodhisattva of compassion in Asia, Isis and Horus in ancient Egypt and the Madonna in Christian cultures. And the archetype of the sacred feast has appeared in a number of forms as well.

 


It had not initially occurred to me as I mused over this controversy that Da Vinci may well have portrayed the Last Supper using an archetype of a sacred feast he borrowed from classical Greek and Roman imagery. And given the fact so many of us almost immediately identified the French display - whose creators insisted was inspired by Greek mythology - with Da Vinci’s masterpiece, that seems quite likely.

Banquet of the Gods. 1840. Carlo Bellosio. Italian 1801-1849. oil/canvas. 

Of course, there have been many other depictions of that sacred feast over time. They range from the earliest visions of the Last Supper in the 6th CE mosaic at Ravenna that probably reflected the actual event with disciples reclining on the floor and Jesus at one end of the table rather than in the center, to the 16th CE tavern scene by Tintoretto where the smoke of the oil lamps above the heads of the bar maids and feasters morphed into angels overhead. That’s one of my favorites.    

At some level it’s not surprising to me that neither I nor many of my fellow Americans immediately recognized the connection to the Greek mythological elements in this display. Unlike many public systems in Europe including France, cultural richness and depth has never been emphasized in American education which tends to be focused on the functional training of workers. My own cultural education came by virtue of having taught interdisciplinary humanities courses for 20 years at the college level. With an undergraduate degree in history, a law degree and a masters of divinity, I had to learn on the run as I taught about new ideas and images that I was discovering along with my students.

But that hard work paid off. I have lived a much richer life as a result. And thus I had an entry point into the research I conducted after the initial outcries over the events in Paris. For that I am grateful even as I see this as a wakeup call for American education. Sadly, I think that is unlikely to happen anytime soon in this age of book banning and historical revision to prevent the beneficiaries of our society from ever feeling uncomfortable.

 

Questions We Must Ask Ourselves

All of this has led me to a questioning of myself and others who leapt to the conclusion that this scene in the opening ceremonies was somehow a profane adaptation of Da Vinci’s Last Supper. I began to wonder what would make me and others presume that it was our vision of this archetype that was being displayed? Why would it be about us? That’s more than a little egocentric. The fact that Da Vinci’s vision is the expression of this archetype that is most familiar to us does not somehow mean that all other sources are somehow automatically excluded.

That, in turn, led me to another question. Why would we presume that the French designers of the opening ceremonies of the world’s games had somehow been intent on disrespecting the world’s largest religion and 30% of the world’s living souls? What would prompt us to engage in this kind of self-focused persecutorial thinking? Why would we be so special that the designers of one of the few gatherings of peoples from around the globe would use this occasion to dis us? That’s more than a little paranoid.

I must admit that I do not have the answers to those questions. But I think they are questions we Christians must ask ourselves. The notion that an infinite G-d who is the source of all that exists is somehow worried about being “mocked” by finite human beings is not terribly credible.

Clearly, defending public perceptions of ourselves is a very human preoccupation, particularly for those of us with brittle facades and fragile egos. But why would an infinite G_d who lies beyond all human conceptions require finite human agents to protect the divine reputation? At what point do our concerns move from the sacred - toward which all true icons point - to the image itself? And at what point in this often unconscious move do we lapse into an unrecognized idolatry, the worship of the works of our own hands and imaginations?

The Olympics committee realized in retrospect that its presentation had offended many people. While that was probably not its aim, it was one of the results. So, it was appropriate that they offered an apology. More importantly it is important that they learn from this experience. Errors are essential to healthy human beings capable of and willing to learn from them. Often, our mistakes are our greatest teachers.

But that also applies to those of us who found ourselves engaging in knee jerk, pearl clutching reactions to this display as well. This is a reality check for us.  We need to be aware of our tendencies to jump to conclusions – here wrongfully – and to presume that everything is about us. 

More importantly, we need to be aware of how presuming the bad faith and malevolent intentions of others frames the way we see the world in incredibly deleterious ways.  In a time when humanity is perhaps more polarized than it has ever been, even as we face a potential extinction event in anthropogenic climate change, we simply do not have the luxury of indulging such negative, deterministic presumptions. As Benjamin Franklin so pointedly observed during the American Revolution, "Gentlemen, we must all hang together or most assuredly, we shall all hang separately." 

May those with ears hear. 

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 Harry Scott Coverston

 Orlando, Florida

 frharry@cfl.rr.com

 hcoverston.orlando@gmail.com

 If the unexamined life is not worth living, surely an unexamined belief system, be it religious or political, is not worth holding. Most things worth considering do not come in sound bites.

Those who believe religion and politics aren't connected don't understand either. – Mahatma Gandhi

For what does G-d require of you but to do justice, and to love kindness, and to walk humbly with your G-d?  - Micah 6:8, Hebrew Scriptures

Do not be daunted by the enormity of the world's grief. Do justly, now. Love mercy, now. Walk humbly now. You are not obligated to complete the work, but neither are you free to abandon it. - Rabbi Rami Shapiro, Wisdom of the Jewish Sages (1993)

   © Harry Coverston, 2024

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