Article by Michael Bronski:
Queering the Code:
http://www.thephoenix.com/article_ektid12613.aspx Queering the Code
Leonardo da Vinci’s work is coded, all right — as gay
By: MICHAEL BRONSKI
5/17/2006 1:21:29 PM
BELOVED APOSTLE: Jesus and John, clockwise from top: Jacopo Bassano’s The Last Supper (1542); Christus-Johannes-Gruppe, 16th-century German stone carving; late-15th-century Dutch painter Meister des Hausbuchs’s The Last Supper.
With close to 60 million copies in print worldwide and a film version starring Tom Hanks opening May 18, The Da Vinci Code is a galloping success. That, of course, has whipped up the fury of traditionalist Christians who object to author Dan Brown’s heretical re-imagining of Christian history: that Jesus had a child with Mary Magdalene whose descendents live in France, and that this “proof” of the feminine principle in Christianity has been kept alive by a secret cult that included Leonardo da Vinci, who hinted at it in his art. Da Vinci’s “code,” the story goes, is encrypted in the artist’s rendering of St. John the Evangelist in his famous painting The Last Supper (1498): the androgynous St. John, often called the Beloved Apostle because of Jesus’s special affection for him, is actually Mary Magdalene. Going even further down a feminist path, Brown casts the Mona Lisa (1506) as an epicene vision of da Vinci himself.
All this may seem quite a stretch, but the Vatican, which normally keeps above the popular-culture fray, has voiced strong objections. On Sunday, May 7, Nigerian cardinal Francis Arinze, a runner-up in the last papal election, even urged Catholics to take some unspecified “legal action” against the book and the film.
The Vatican is right about one thing: Brown’s story doesn’t really make historical or artistic sense. And yet Brown is on to something: there are sexual and religious codes in da Vinci’s paintings (and in much other medieval and Renaissance art), but they are not of some “feminine principle” ruthlessly subjugated by the Roman Catholic Church. Rather, da Vinci’s code exposes a homoerotic bond between Jesus and St. John, and it posits that this bond was the basis for religious acceptance of not only same-sex love, but also divinely accepted same-sex unions as well. And the Vatican was annoyed by Dan Brown’s interpretation!
Brotherly love
There is little doubt that da Vinci was attracted to and intimately involved with men: he avoided conviction on two arrests for sodomy, had close relationships with a series of handsome youths (the most noted of whom was Gian Giacomo de’ Caprotti, nicknamed Salai, or “lamb of Satan”), and his art clearly showed a deep imaginative interest in the beautiful male body. (His rarely reproduced Angel in the Flesh, a sketch of the angel Gabriel, portrays a beautiful, androgynous young man with an erection.) Da Vinci’s sexual and artistic interests were not unusual in 15th- and early-16th-century Italian culture. Michelangelo, Donatello, Botticelli, Caravaggio, and Cellini all have similar personal profiles and artistic inclinations. In fact, Florence, da Vinci’s birthplace and home base, was notorious for its public homosexual culture.
None of this is news. Freud wrote extensively about da Vinci’s homosexuality in 1910. Such ideas were commonplace in 1950s popular culture. The widely read Sexology magazine ran a story about da Vinci’s sexuality in June 1953 that included a doctored photo showing that the Mona Lisa was the artist in drag. Contemporary critics have also written extensively on the “gay sensibility” in da Vinci’s and other Renaissance artists’ work. It would be silly, and grossly inaccurate, to argue that all of da Vinci’s work has a gay subtext, but a close look at some of the work and its cultural context can tell us a lot.
For all of the Vatican’s current apoplexy about homosexuality, there is little doubt that religious art — particularly from the Italian Renaissance — was flush with male homoerotic imagery: Michelangelo’s David (1504), Caravaggio’s The Inspiration of St. Matthew (1602), Donatello’s David (circa 1440s), and Sodoma’s St. Sebastian (1525) are probably the most famous, but a connection between male homoeroticism and accepted Catholic iconography is generally evident. That is why the implicit homoeroticism in da Vinci’s fresco The Last Supper should not be at all surprising. Depicting events from the Gospel according to St. John, the painting shows the beloved evangelist — a pretty, young beardless man — sitting next to Jesus. In spite of Brown’s insistence that da Vinci cast this figure as a coded Magdalene, it makes far more sense to take the fresco at face value and see that there is an intimate relationship between the two men.
LEONARDO DA VINCI’S ANGEL IN THE FLESH (UNDATED): a sketch of the angel Gabriel with a huge erection.
This was not a new idea, and da Vinci was not letting his sexual impulses dictate his theology. The Gospels testify to an intense intimacy between Jesus and John. The beloved apostle himself says that on the cross, Jesus tells his mother that John is now her son, and the non-canonical Secret Gospel of Mark portrays an explicitly sexual relationship between Jesus and John as well as between Jesus and other men. In contrast with much medieval and Renaissance art, da Vinci’s The Last Supper is, if anything, a modest portrayal of the relationship. Jacopo Bassano’s The Last Supper (1542), for instance, pictures a sleepy, seated, barely adolescent St. John who seems to be physically attached to the Jesus standing behind him. Late-15th-century Dutch painter Meister des Hausbuchs’s The Last Supper shows the beloved apostle’s head resting firmly and lovingly in Jesus’s lap.
These images of physical intimacy were not unusual: high- and late-medieval stone carvings of Jesus and John often place the saint’s head on Jesus’s shoulder, breast, or lap. The implications of this imagery were not lost on the faithful. According to art historian Jeffrey Hamburger in St. John the Divine: The Deified Evangelist in Medieval Art and Theology (UC Press, 2002), “John played many roles in medieval thought and literature ... including ... the virgin ‘bride’ of Christ ... model of contemplative union with the bridegroom.” Usually presented as androgynous, John is the perfect mate for the perfect man-God. Hamburger notes that one version of the wedding feast at Canna that “circulated quite widely in both Latin and Middle High German sources” has John rejecting “his earthly bride ... in favor of Christ, his spiritual bridegroom.”
Most theologians would argue that the relationship between John and Jesus was platonic, and they’d be right — but in the wrong sense of the word. Brown, it turns out, gets at least one thing right when he says, “When Christianity came along, the old pagan religions did not die easily.” While contextually, the images of Jesus and St. John are Christian, the iconography itself is much older. The pairing of Jesus and his young partner in medieval and Renaissance art is frequently reminiscent of images of Zeus and Ganymede. In Greek mythology, Zeus, in the form of an eagle, abducted the young Trojan prince to make him his cupbearer on Mount Olympus, and thus they became the most famous same-sex couple in the ancient world. The highly erotic Zeus-Ganymede myth was so commonplace that art historian James Saslow notes in his groundbreaking 1986 study Ganymede in the Renaissance (Yale) that there are well more than 200 versions of it in the Renaissance and early Baroque periods. The associations between Zeus-Ganymede and Jesus-John were so strong that in Christian iconography the official emblems of St. John were the eagle and the chalice. Of course, the difference is that the Zeus-Ganymede story is explicitly gay and the Jesus-John story is not.
DIVINE COUPLINGS: Medieval and Renaissance renderings of Jesus and St. John recall the homoerotic imagery of pagan Greek mythology, notably the joining of Zeus (in the form of an eagle) and the youth Ganymede — here portrayed in a 1611 painting by Reubens.
Perils of history
One of the reasons The Da Vinci Code is so popular is that a large number of readers deeply question patriarchal Christianity. Dan Brown’s novel is a compelling fantasia on Christian history in which sexuality and gender take on radically different meanings and realities. The Vatican and other Christian denominations hate Brown’s novel and have been campaigning against Ron Howard’s film because they understand that, despite the ludicrousness of Brown’s narrative, its main thrust is truthful: Christianity has been appallingly, murderously misogynist. But there is no need for conspiracy theories to grasp this obvious historical truth. The same is true of mainstream Christianity’s treatment of lesbian and gay men. Its campaigns against gay equality under the law, same-sex marriage, and gay adoption have been vicious in the extreme.
It would be a mistake, however, to demand that Christianity should be loving and supportive of homosexual women and men just because there is a long, hidden history of their inclusion in the church, or because past artists and even evangelists presented Jesus as a lover of men. Readers of The Da Vinci Code — enthusiasts and revilers alike — should bear at least one thing in mind: using “history” to justify moral decency is always a mistake because moral decency requires no justification.
Michael Bronski is the author of Pulp Friction: Uncovering the Golden Age of Gay Male Pulps (St. Martin’s Press, 2003)