Presenting the Law: Text and Imagery on Dutch Ten Commandments Panels
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.13154/er.v7.2018.78-108Keywords:
Ten Commandments panels, Reformed visual culture, church interiorAbstract
Many Dutch Calvinist churches house a Ten Commandments panel, installed in the late sixteenth or seventeenth century as part of the Reformed adaptation of the medieval Catholic church interior. In this article, the characteristic design of Ten Commandments panels is analyzed as a form of Calvinist visual culture. It suggests that these panels were primarily
made to be viewed rather than thoroughly read. The remarkably figurative Moses imagery on panels points at a divergence between the rigid Reformed theological image prohibition and the practice of the adaptation of the church interior. The placement of Ten Commandments panels in the Reformed church interior highlights their symbolic value: It signified the need for self-examination of the participants in the Lord’s Supper. The original spatial setting of Ten Commandments panels also shows how the newly Reformed furnishing and use of church space was rooted in its late medieval Catholic past.
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Copyright (c) 2018 Jacolien Wubs
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.