Current:Home > ContactStained glass window showing dark-skinned Jesus Christ heading to Memphis museum -BeyondWealth Learning
Stained glass window showing dark-skinned Jesus Christ heading to Memphis museum
View
Date:2025-04-15 14:55:09
WARREN, R.I. (AP) — A nearly 150-year-old stained-glass church window in Rhode Island that depicts a dark-skinned Jesus Christ interacting with women in New Testament scenes — known to many as the “Black Gospel Window” — has found a new home at a museum in Tennessee.
The window was installed in 1878 at the now-closed St. Mark’s Episcopal Church in Warren. It is the oldest known public example of stained glass on which Christ is depicted as a person of color that one expert has seen. Scholars have studied the work, trying to determine the artist’s motivations.
Measuring 12 feet tall and 5 feet wide (3.7 meters by 1.5 meters), the window depicts two biblical passages in which women, also painted with dark skin, appear as equals to Christ. One shows Christ in conversation with Martha and Mary, the sisters of Lazarus, from the Gospel of Luke. The other shows Christ speaking to the Samaritan woman at the well from the Gospel of John.
Made by the Henry E. Sharp studio in New York, the window had largely been forgotten until a few years ago, when Hadley Arnold and her family bought the Greek Revival church building, which opened as a church in 1830 and closed in 2010, to convert into their home.
Arnold hoped to find a museum, college or other institution to display the window. She worked with a panel of Rhode Island leaders in the arts, historical preservation and Black history before deciding that its new home would be the Memphis Brooks Museum of Art in Tennessee.
Supporters of the move note the museum is committed to serving as a powerhouse of Black artistic and curatorial excellence. They also note that Memphis is one of the nation’s largest Black-majority cities, one with a vital religious community that played a leading role in the nation’s civil rights movement.
Virginia Raguin, an expert on the history of stained glass at the College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Massachusetts, said last year that she and other experts confirmed the skin tones — in black and brown paint on milky white glass that was fired in an oven to set the image — were original and deliberate.
Whether it depicts a Black Jesus has been open to speculation.
Arnold doesn’t feel comfortable using that term, preferring to say it depicts Christ as a person of color, probably Middle Eastern, which she says would make sense, given where the Galilean Jewish preacher was from.
“The 1877 Black Gospel Window will have pride of place,” Arnold said in a statement. “It will be on permanent display in a glass-walled gallery adjacent to a central courtyard, flooded with natural light by day, illuminated and visible from a public courtyard by night.”
veryGood! (95322)
Related
- Highlights from Trump’s interview with Time magazine
- New Research Explores the Costs of Climate Tipping Points, and How They Could Compound One Another
- Read Jennifer Garner's Rare Public Shout-Out to Ex Ben Affleck
- Find 15 Gifts for the Reader in Your Life in This Book Lover Starter Pack
- Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
- If You're a Very Busy Person, These Time-Saving Items From Amazon Will Make Your Life Easier
- Read Jennifer Garner's Rare Public Shout-Out to Ex Ben Affleck
- Is There Something Amiss With the Way the EPA Tracks Methane Emissions from Landfills?
- Why Sean "Diddy" Combs Is Being Given a Laptop in Jail Amid Witness Intimidation Fears
- How the pandemic changed the rules of personal finance
Ranking
- Meet the volunteers risking their lives to deliver Christmas gifts to children in Haiti
- San Francisco Becomes the Latest City to Ban Natural Gas in New Buildings, Citing Climate Effects
- Suspect arrested in Cleveland shooting that wounded 9
- The Essential Advocate, Philippe Sands Makes the Case for a New International Crime Called Ecocide
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- When Will Renewables Pass Coal? Sooner Than Anyone Thought
- Ditch Drying Matte Formulas and Get $108 Worth of Estée Lauder 12-Hour Lipsticks for $46
- Ecuador’s High Court Affirms Constitutional Protections for the Rights of Nature in a Landmark Decision
Recommendation
A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
Norovirus outbreaks surging on cruise ships this year
Days of Our Lives Actor Cody Longo's Cause of Death Revealed
An otter was caught stealing a surfboard in California. It was not the first time she's done it.
The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
A big bank's big mistake, explained
In Final Debate, Trump and Biden Display Vastly Divergent Views—and Levels of Knowledge—On Climate
The EPA Is Asking a Virgin Islands Refinery for Information on its Spattering of Neighbors With Oil