Santa Brígida - What's a Nice Girl Like You Doing in a
Place Like New Mexico?
by Thomas J.
Steele, S.J.
My friend Charles G. Ryan gave Regis University a
generous gift in memory of his wife Alice Gass Ryan: four
nineteenth-century New Mexican retablos. One of them, by
the great santero José Rafael Aragon, showing a woman in
a nun's habit holding a heart, appeared to depict Santa
Gertrudis; but upon cleaning, the nun's veil turned out
to be not black but pink with a red border, and what had
seemed to be Gertrude's red pennant on an abbess's
crozier was in fact a large candle with a very large
flame.
Quick, the iconography books! Look for a woman in a black
gown and a pink and red veil, holding a burning candle in
her right hand and a heart in her left. Fortunately, the
old standbys stood faithfully by me and revealed that the
subject was Santa Brígida de Suecia, Saint Bridget (or
Birgitta) of Sweden. The Rafael Aragon panel is the first
identified representation of this subject in the New
Mexican tradition, but Larry Frank's New Kingdom of the
Saints (p. 56) pictures a Pedro Antonio Fresquis panel
that also represents Santa Brígida, since a crucifix is a
normal variant for the candle.1
Bridget was born to a very prominent and powerful noble
family of Sweden. Her father was godfather to King
Magnus, her husband Prince Ulf of Nericia was a principal
counselor of the king, and Bridget was the godmother to
the crown prince. She received a sort of vocational
vision of Christ at age eleven and wished to become a
nun, but her father insisted that she marry at fourteen;
she and her husband observed voluntary celibacy for two
years, then had eight children. Bridget's initial vision
led eventually to high mystical prayer and to a
mystical-marriage experience of exchanging hearts with
Christ, so that she lived thereafter by Christ's heart
and he by hers; thus the heart as a portion of Bridget's
iconography.2
Bridget, who always remained quite independent, made the
three great pilgrimages of the time: to Jerusalem, to
Rome, and to Compostella; she and Santiago are often
shown as pilgrims, and she is a special patron of
pilgrims. Ulf and Bridget, who had long been devout
members of the Franciscan Third Order, finally separated
when their children were old enough, becoming Cistercians
(Trappists). Ulf soon died. Bridget practiced severe
corporal penances, especially on Fridays when, in honor
of Christ's passion and Mary's compassion, she dropped
hot drops of candle-wax onto her forearm until it bled.
The candle component of her iconography is echoed in her
vision of Christ's birth, for she saw Saint Joseph enter
the cave with a lighted candle and then leave Mary alone
to give birth to the Holy Child; when he had been born,
his radiance completely eclipsed the weak earthly light
of Joseph's candle.3
Her auditions, during which Mary spoke to her and
described her life in the Holy Land, and her visions,
when she saw various central events of the New Testament
as if she were present, led to Bridget's Revelations,
drafted in Swedish and translated into Latin after her
death by her two spiritual directors and eventually into
several vernacular languages. These unofficial addenda to
the gospels provided grist for the mill of later medieval
spirituality, which focused above all on the changing
humanity of Jesus Christ during his birth and childhood
and during his suffering and death. The people of
medieval Western Europe had an insatiable hunger for
every available detail of the Christ-event. Santa
Brígida's writings brought Christ's infancy and his
passion together because Mary described how she, the
Child, and even Joseph clearly knew that Jesus would
suffer crucifixion. Since all this information was
verbalized, it took over a century for it to be
transformed into the images of devotional art that showed
El Niño Pasionario, a child from infant to early
adolescent carrying the cross, being scourged, and so
forth. But Bridget transformed artists' portrayal of the
Nativity and the Crucifixion from her lifetime onward.4
Toward the end of her life, Bridget founded the
Brigittine Order of nuns, and she is shown in the habit
she designed, the black gown and a pink or white veil
with a light red border - the final components of an
iconography unidentified in New Mexico until the occasion
of the Ryans' generous gift.5 But now that we know that
two Santa Brígida retablos survive from
nineteenth-century New Mexico, perhaps collectors and
museums might want to take a second look at the nuns in
their possession: could there be more surviving Brígidas
than two?
ENDNOTES
1 The "standbys" are Juan Ferrando Roig, Iconografía de
los Santos (Barcelona: Ediciones Omega, 1950), pp. 64-65;
Louis Réau, Iconographie de l'art chretien (Paris:
Presses Universitaires de France, 1955-59), 3:246-48;
Gertrud Schiller, Iconography of Christian Art
(Greenwich: New York Graphic Society, 1971), 1:78-83,
2:196-206; George Kaftal, The Iconography of the Saints
in Central and South Italian Schools of Painting
(Florence: Sansoni, 1965), col. 233-40. Roig and Kaftal
list the crucifix as an alternative for the burning
candle.
I received special help from Anthony Butkovich,
Iconography: Saint Bridget of Sweden (Los Angeles:
Ecumenical Foundation of America, 1969), passim;
Butkovich, Revelations: Saint Birgitta of Sweden (Los
Angeles: Ecumenical Foundation of America, 1973), pp. 53,
65, 96, 202-03, 249.
Larry Frank, A New Kingdom of the Saints (Santa Fe: Red
Crane Books, 1992), p. 56
2 Réau, 3:150-51, lists the "saints cardiophores -
heart-bearing saints" as Bridget, Gertrude, Augustine,
and Anthony of Padua.
3 Réau, 3:247 (patron of pilgrims). "Every Friday she
made the flaming wax of a candle drip upon her bare flesh
so that it left wounds, and if the wounds healed somewhat
before the next Friday, she would plow them open with her
fingernails so that her body would not be without them
She did so to commemorate the Lord's passion"; Acta
Sanctorum, Octobris IV (Paris: 1856), 403; Réau, 3:246,
248; Kaftal, cols. 233, 236; Butkovich, Iconography, pp.
65, 67; Butkovich, Revelations, p. 65; Marguerite T.
Harris, Birgitta of Sweden: Life and Selected Writings
(New York: Paulist Press, 1990), pp. 96-97, 249n114 (wax
on forearm). Schiller 1:78; Butkovich, Iconography, pp.
49-50; Harris, pp. 202-04, 305n768 (Joseph's candle).
4 Réau, 3:247-48; Schiller, 2:196; Butkovich,
Iconography, pp. 52, 54-57; Butkovich, Revelations, pp.
31, 43.
5 Anna Murphy Jameson, Legends of the Monastic Orders
(Boston: Ticknor and Fields, 1865), pp. 235-37.
Thomas J. Steele, S.J., is a regular contributor to
Tradicion Revista. He is also the author of Santos and
Saints and author or editor of at least a dozen other
books on Southwestern art and culture.
Iconography
of Santa Brígida
by Paul Rhetts
Feast Day:
July 23
Story:
1303-73. She experienced several visions and revelations,
was the founder of the Order of the Most Holy Savior (the
Brigittines, follow the Augustinian Rule), and embarked
on at least three pilgrimages (Santiago de Compostella,
Rome, and the Holy Land).
Patronage:
Sweden, scholars, and pilgrims
References:
The Opening Prayer of the Mass begins: "Lord our God, you
revealed the secrets of heaven to St. Bridget as she
meditated on the suffering and death of your Son. May
your people rejoice in the revelation of your glory."
Attributes:
Black nun's habit of the Brigittine Order with a pink
veil with a red border; holding a heart in the left hand,
and a candle with a flame in the right. Outside of New
Mexico, frequently seen with symbols of the pilgrim
(seashells pinned to her cloak).
Paul Rhetts is the co-publisher of Tradicion Revista and
the author or editor of five books on the arts and
culture of the Southwest.
First published in Tradicion Revista, Volume 5, No. 4,
Winter 2000.
Copyright 2000. May not be reproduced in any form without
written permission.