The Halo
also called NIMBUS, in art, radiant circle or disk surrounding the
head of a holy person, a representation of spiritual character through
the symbolism of light. In Hellenistic and Roman art the sun-god Helios
and Roman emperors often appear with a crown of rays. Because of its
pagan origin, the form was avoided in Early Christian art, but a simple
circular nimbus was adopted by Christian emperors for their official
portraits. From the middle of the 4th century, Christ was also shown
with this imperial attribute, as was his symbol, the Lamb of God, from
the end of the 4th century. In the 5th century it was sometimes given to
angels, but it was not until the 6th century that the
halo became customary for the Virgin Mary and
other saints. For a period during the 5th century, living persons of
eminence were depicted with a square nimbus.
The halo was used regularly in representations of Christ, the angels,
and the saints throughout the Middle Ages. Often Christ's halo is
quartered by the lines of a cross or inscribed with three bands,
interpreted to signify his position in the Trinity. From the 15th
century, however, with the growth of naturalism in
Renaissance art, the nimbus created problems in representation. At
first it was treated by some Florentine artists as a solid object seen
in perspective, a disk fixed to the back of a saint's head. The
inadequacy of this solution led to its decline in Italian art in the
16th century and to its abandonment by Michelangelo and Titian. In
Flemish painting of the 15th century, it began to be represented as rays
of light; under the influence of the
Counter-Reformation, which sought to restore a glorious conception
to religious art, this form was adopted by Italian artists of the late
16th century, notably Tintoretto, as a realistically rendered light
emanating from the holy person's head. This new interpretation was the
standard one in the Baroque period and in most subsequent religious
works.
The halo is also found in
Buddhist art of India, appearing from the late 3rd century AD. It is
believed that the motif was brought to the East by Greek invaders --
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