Wednesday, January 6, 2010

The Epiphany, Festival of the Three Kings & Carnaval

Today is the Epiphany or the Festival of the Three Kings. The day on which the Western Church and most Protestant Churches traditionally celebrate the arrival of the "Kings from the East" in Bethlehem to honor the new born Baby Jesus.

"Adoration of the Magi" Hieronymus Bosch


By the middle ages, veneration of the Wise Men had become popular throughout Europe and Epiphany was known as the the Feast the of the Three Kings … all of which coincided with Twelfth Night, and the end of the ancient season of Yuletide. This pagan holdover was a time of "misrule," and in many cultures the custom of wearing costumes and hiding one's identity with a mask became popular. Shakespeare's play Twelfth Night, employs the idea of things not being what they seem, or should be.

Twelfth Night festival was celebrated with the preparation of a "Kings Cake," and was also regarded as the beginning of the Carnival season. The custom of masquerade and costuming evolved into the custom of elaborate entertainments known as "masques," and later expanded into the extravagant social events which featured elegant balls and banquets for the very rich, and street celebrations and festivals for the lower social classes.

It is symbolic of the tension between the pagan past and the Christian West that the season of rowdy Carnaval begins on the Feast of Epiphany and ends with the beginning of Ash Wednesday and preparations for the Christian observance of Lent. Twelfth Night is still regarded as the initiation of Carnival Season in much of the world, and this evening, television news station WDSU in New Orleans reported on the first parade of the Mardi Gras season to "roll through the streets of the city!"








"Let The Good Times Roll!"

Saturday, January 2, 2010

TWELVETIDE - Following Yonder Star

"Old Christmas is past, twelve tide is the last
And we bid you adieu, great joy to the new"

The "Twelve Days of Christmas" are counted in different ways depending on the cultural traditions of the country in which the Yuletide season is celebrated. Celtic custom, counts sunset as the beginning of a new day and according to this method the Twelve Days of Christmas (Twelve Tide) are usually counted from the evening of December 25 until the morning of January 6th which is the Twelfth Day. Following this method of counting the days beginning with sundown, the evening of January 5 is Twelfth Night. In some church traditions, only the full days are counted so that January 5th is the Eleventh Day of Christmas, January 6th is Twelfth Day and the evening of January 6 is counted as Twelfth Night. In ancient cultures and in current church traditions, Christmas, or Yuletide is celebrated as a season rather than just a single day; in some areas of Europe, Yule celebrations begin in November and continue well into February! January 6th is celebrated as the Festival of the Three Kings, or Epiphany and is traditionally regarded as the day on which the "Kings from the East" arrived in Bethlehem to greet the newly born Baby Jesus. We know very little about the Kings - Mathew says only that they were "Kings from the East." Current scholars and historians have concluded that they were "wise men," or Magi - trained in many kinds of knowledge, including astronomy/astrology and no doubt lived and worked in Persia (present day Iran).


"We have seen his star in the East"

The account in the Gospel of Mathew does not say what amount of time passed between the sighting by the Magi of the Star of Bethlehem and their arrival to honor the newborn King, but it is clear that the distances involved presented an undertaking of great magnitude and it is assumed that the Magi traveled by caravan in order to reach their destination safely and as quickly as possible.
"and, lo, the star, which they saw in the east, went before them,
til it came and stood over where the young child was"

In the centuries since the gospel of Mathew was first set down and carried into Europe by the missionaries of the Christian church, artists in many countries have seen the "wise men" in many different ways and the interpretation of the story of the Wise Men has expanded as well - although Mathew does not tell us how many Magi traveled to Judea, tradition has set the number at three, probably a reflection of the three kinds of gifts presented to the Baby Jesus - "gold, Frankencense, and Myrrh." Costumes, physical characteristics and style of dress have all changed to reflect the vision and cultural orientation of the artist who painted them; they've traveled by camel, by horse and on elephants, but it matters not whether we see them on camels in the desert, horses in the country side of Renaissance Italy or the exquisitely crafted figures of a Neapolitan creche scene, the Wise Men are instantly recognized as an exotic and mysterious part of the Christmas story.


Byzantine Mosaic

"medieval Kings"


"Procession of the Kings" & Details - Benozzo Gozzili


"Procession of the Magi" - 18th Century Neapolitan Baroque Creche
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City
Gift of Mrs. Loretta Hines Howard


"Field and Fountain,
Moor and Mountain,
Following Yonder Star."

Friday, January 1, 2010

HAPPY NEW YEAR! January 1, 2010


Chiostri



SNOW DAYS - WINTER TIME


in my own yard - "boyz from the hood"


Tibetian Prayer Flags at the Top of The World



Winter Fantasy from Another Time


"Speed"