Santa Ludgarda: An Old New Mexican Retablo Shows Us a New
Subject
by Thomas J.
Steele, S.J.
Some months ago, Larry and Alyce Frank of Arroyo Hondo
acquired a panel painting by Molleno, the prolific New
Mexican santero (painter and carver of santos) who worked
in the first half of the nineteenth century. In Molleno's
spare and notational late style, this retablo shows
Christ on the cross reaching his right hand down to
embrace a nondescript figure clad in an ankle-length
black gown with a black hood. This figure, who looks
slightly more female than male, levitates in the air and
is marked on hands and lower legs with various
bloodstains.
Baffled, the Franks turned to me for some help in
identifying this new subject, but I could only say that
the figure ought to be the stigmatic San Francisco de
Asís, to whom Christ Crucified appeared in the manner
shown. The black garment, another friend suggested, might
be the result of indigo oxidizing, as it does
occasionally, but the normal blue Franciscan robe would
still not explain away the beardless Francis. Someone
else suggested to Mr. Frank that the figure might be
meant to be the Sorrowful Mother at the foot of the
cross, but I could find no trace of any such variant of
the Dolores image.
Then fortunately I happened to meet Dr. Yvonne Lange in
the library of the International Folk Art, a unit of the
Museum of New Mexico. Dr. Lange, Director Emerita of
MOIFA, is an expert on religious iconography in general
and on the impact of prints on Spanish Colonial
devotional representations in particular.1 I described
the piece and offered for review the guesses that had
already been made, and Dr. Lange immediately volunteered
that the retablo certainly depicted Santa Lutgarda - a
saint of whom I had never heard.
Lutgarda (the name is variously spelled) was formerly
much better known than she is today; there was, for
instance, a seventeenth-century Spanish translation of
her Latin hagiography, written by her former spiritual
director the Dominican Thomas of Cantimpré. The saint was
born in 1182 of a mother from the petty nobility and a
bourgeois father. At age twelve, she entered the convent
of the "Black Benedictines" near Brussels more as a
student than as a novice. Then one day The Man of Sorrows
appeared to her when she was talking to a young man
through the visitors' grille. Christ showed her the wound
in his side made when the Roman soldier's spear struck
into his heart, asked her for her love, and promised her
his own. She immediately sent her admirer away and began
to dedicate herself to fervent prayer.2
As her spiritual life grew, so did the phenomena
associated with it such as the levitation which the
Molleno panel depicts. Soon she transferred from her lax
Benedictine convent to the much more strict and rewarding
Cistercian (Trappist) life, and there she eventually
advanced to a mystical marriage with Christ the
Bridegroom of the human soul, uniting her will
permanently with the divine will. The rupture of a vein
in her side assured her that she received during life the
equivalent of the Roman martyr Saint Agnes' death being
marked with the brand marks of the crucified Lord, the
stigmata; and thereafter she often shared in Jesus'
bloody sweat in the Garden of Gethsemane. Shortly after
receiving the stigmatic wound in the side, she
experienced the event that Molleno's New Mexican retablo
depicts. The Man of Sorrows appeared to her hanging on
the cross, loosened his right arm from its cruel nail,
embraced her, drew her mouth to the wound in his side,
and bade her sip a drop of his precious blood, sharing
his very life with her so that what was his by divine
nature became hers by participation, by love, by grace.
For the final eleven years of her life she was blind in
body though increasingly enlightened in spirit until she
died in 1246. 3
Lutgarda exemplified a new, less liturgical, more
individualistic spirituality that arose when the
cloisters began to echo the growth of urban prosperity.
Lutgarda continued a tradition that began in the eleventh
century and matured with Bernard of Clairvaux (d. 1153),
who increasingly turned Christians' attention to the
mutable humanity of Christ in his birth and childhood and
his passion and death. Dominic Guzmán (1170-1221) and
Francis of Assisi (1181-1221) were Lutgarda's
contemporaries. Iberian saints in the same tradition of
mystical prayer were Ignatius Loyola, Teresa of Ávila,
and John of the Cross. The tradition concluded with the
seventeenth-century French devotion to the Sacred Heart,
which focused upon the reserved Eucharist detached from
the liturgy of the Eucharist. 4
Many eminent scholars have summarized Lutgarda's
iconography. Louis Réau notes her likeness to Francis of
Assisi, the Crucified Christ embracing the kneeling nun,
drawing her mouth to taste of the bleeding wound in his
side, and exchanging his heart for hers to betoken their
mystical marriage. Maurits de Meyer shows a fraktur style
drawing of Lutgarda with her lips to Christ's
spear-wound. Antonino Buttita reprints a reverse-glass
painting from Sicily that shows the Man of Sorrows
reaching toward the kneeling nun, whom an inscription
identifies as "Patron of Childbirth." The Catalán
Spaniard Ferrando Roig reproduces a woodcut with Lutgarda
kneeling with a book at her feet before a crucifix from
which a gout of blood flies to her lips, and Goya
depicted Santa Lutgarda in one of his four painting for
the Cistercian convent church of Santa Ana y San Joachín
in Valladolid. In The Art of Private Devotion, Gloria
Fraser Giffords presents a nineteenth-century Mexican
folk oil-on-tin image of Lutgarda and Kurt Stephen of
McAllen, Texas, has collected three Lutgarda láminas, one
of which appears here as an illustration.5
Some years ago, the late Fray Angélico Chávez told me
that around 1800 annual devotional books began to list
the saints venerated on each day of the year and that to
supplement the quite limited number of New Mexican
Hispanic surnames for a burgeoning population, many new
given names shortly started appearing in the baptismal
registers. Perhaps like Santa Dulubina, a Molleno subject
from his earlier years, some depiction of Santa Lutgarda
made her way to New Mexico and found a devotional context
ready to receive her.6
So at any rate, we can conclude that Dr. Yvonne Lange was
right and that the mystery of the Molleno board is
solved.
ENDNOTES
1. Yvonne Lange, "The Impact of European Prints on the
Devotional Tin Paintings of Mexico: A Transferral
Hypothesis," in Gloria Fraser Giffords, The Art of
Private Devotion: Retablo Painting in Mexico (Fort Worth:
Intercultura, 1991), pp. 64-72.
2. Thomas Merton, What Are These Wounds? (Milwaukee:
Bruce Publishing Company, 1950), pp. vii, 6. I have
identified the advocation of Christ on the cross as the
Man of Sorrows, a devotional rather than a historical
image, because he is shown alive (moving, speaking, with
open eyes) and yet already with the spear-wound in his
side (inflicted on him after his death); see Gertrud
Schiller, The Iconography of Christian Art (Greenwich:
New York Graphics, 1972), 2:198.
3. Merton, pp. vii, 10, 13-14, 17-18, 124-28, 144, and
165; on the status of stigmata as miraculous phenomena,
see Augustin François Poulin, The Graces of Interior
Prayer (Saint Louis: B. Herder, 1950), pp. 554-58. Alban
Butler et al., The Lives of the Saints (Westminster:
Christian Classics, 1956), 2:557-58, state that Lutgarda
had a friend and mentor named Christine the Astonishing.
4. Merton, pp. viii, 23, and 32. Saint Gertrude the Great
has the same ambiguous provenance as Lutgarda in also
being a Benedictine nun who became a Trappistine.
5. Louis Reau, Iconographie de l'Art Chrétien (Paris:
Presses Universitaires de France, 1958), 3:2:840-41;
Maurits de Meyer, Imagerie Populaire ds Pays-Bas (Milan:
Electa, 1970), pl. 45; Antonino Buttitta, La Pittura su
Vetro in Sicilia (Palermo: Sellerio, 1972), pl. 5; Juan
Ferrando Roig, Iconografía de los Santos (Barcelona:
Ediciones Omega, 1950), pp. 177-78; José Guidol, Goya,
1746-1828 (Barcelona: Ediciones Polígrafa, 1980), 1:324;
Gloria Fraser Giffords and Yvonne Lange, The Art of
Private Devotion (Fort Worth: Intercultrua, 1991), p.
116.
I wonder if Giffords' illustration 63 might show in the
right background not a tabernacle but a
totally-out-of-perspective escritoire with several books
standing on its upper shelf, a quill pen and an inkwell
sitting on the lower shelf, and book lying on the writing
surface to the left.
6. José E. Espinosa, "Little Dutch Girl Far from Home,"
El Palacio 61 (1954), 70-73; my thanks to Lawrence Frank
for suggesting the Lydwina-Lutgarda parallel.
Jesuit Father Tom Steele is the author of Santos and
Saints (now in its 3rd edition from Ancient City Press).
Father Steele is the author of numerous other articles
and books on the art and culture of New Mexico.
First published in Tradicion Revista, Volume 1, No. 3,
Fall 1996.
Copyright 1996. May not be reproduced in any form without
written permission.