Moses and his Ethiopian wife Zipporah

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Moses and his Ethiopian wife Zipporah
Flemish Baroque
Dimensions116.3 cm × 104 cm (45.8 in × 41 in)
LocationRubenshuis, Antwerp, Belgium[1]

Moses and his Ethiopian wife Zipporah (Dutch: Mozes en zijn Ethiopische vrouw Seporah), c. 1645–1650, is a painting by the

half-length depiction of the biblical prophet Moses
, and his African wife.

The oil on canvas painting is now in the Rubenshuis museum in Antwerp, Belgium.

Description

Moses, a white man with dark hair, stands in the foreground, his right hand palm up and his left hand on the

cruciform halo.[3][4][5]
: 247 

Inspiration

Book of Numbers 12:1 states that Moses was criticized by his older siblings for having married a "Cushite woman", Aethiopissa in the Latin Vulgate Bible version.[a] One interpretation of this verse is that Moses' wife Zipporah, daughter of Reuel/Jethro from Midian, was black. Another interpretation is that Moses married more than once. In Josephus and medieval legend he married Tharbis as his first wife. Jordaens' view is unknown, and the painting has been exhibited under titles without the name Zipporah.[5]: 248 

Jordaens likely encountered the tale of Moses' wife in contemporary translations of the Bible and the writings of Josephus. Possibly he had also come into contact with the Jesuit Alonso de Sandoval's works on Africa. Contemporary artists who also included black women in their paintings probably inspired him too, such as Jan van den Hoecke's Sybil Agrippina.[5]: 254, 274 

Jordaens likely made the painting not on commission, but for himself or a close friend.[5]: 247 

Interpretation

Art historian Elizabeth McGrath says that

Moses defends his black wife before the viewer, not his brother and sister. It is from the viewer that the Ethiopian woman draws back, questioning, puzzled and perhaps a little fearful. By his brilliant exploitation of the device of inclusion and confrontation, Jordaens gives the subject a pointed relevance, challenging Christians of his day to accept Moses's Ethiopian, as Miriam and Aaron could not, not just as a representative of pagan wisdom, a shadowed image of their own Church, but as a neighbour, in herself.[5]: 282 

See also

Notes

  1. ^ "Ethiopian woman" in the King James Version and "Cushite wife" in the New International Version.

References

  1. ^ a b "Jacob Jordaens (I)". Netherlands Institute for Art History.
  2. ^ Smith Galer, Sophia (16 January 2019). "How black women were whitewashed by art". BBC. Retrieved 21 January 2021.
  3. .
  4. ^ "Mozes en zijn Ethiopische vrouw Seporah | Barok in de Zuidelijke Nederlanden | Een online museum". Flemish Art Collection.
  5. ^
    ISSN 0075-4390
    .