Moshe and the Luchot in Art/0
Moshe and the Luchot in Art
Introduction
The three images discussed here all display Moshe with the tablets of the covenant, but at slightly different points in the narrative. In Guido Reni's image,1 Moshe simply holds the tablets, while in Tissot's painting2 he prepares to throw them in response to the sin of the golden calf. Chagall3 illustrates the next moment, after the tablets have already been dropped. The three artists' depictions of Moshe vary, reflecting their different understanding of his emotions at this juncture. Similarly, their portrayals of the tablets differ, highlighting how little we really know regarding their shape, size and the writing upon them.
Contrasting Images
Reni
Reni's painting can pass for a portrait of Moshe. The majestic leader fills the image, his red robes contrasting with the grey clouds in the sky. He holds one of the long stone tablets against his body and lifts the other above his head. His mouth stretches into an "oh", but it is not clear if this is a reaction to the golden calf, or if he is simply calling out and presenting the tablets to the nation.
Tissot
Unlike Reni, Tissot chooses to render Moshe in action, capturing his fury at the sinning nation. Moshe stands on a rock, body swaying back, as he moves to hurl the tablets below. A second figure, presumably Yehoshua, grasps him, perhaps attempting to prevent the sacred tablets from being destroyed. The scene is set not amidst lofty clouds, but against a mountainous range. The harsh lines of the stones reflect Moshe's harsh response to the golden calf.
Chagall
Chagall, like the other artists, prefers to portray just Moshe and the tablets without the accompanying nation. The image is divided on a diagonal with a hint of grey-black clouds filling the left half, and a greenish mountain covering the right. A dismayed Moshe stands on the mountain, his hands held aloft in a gesture of helplessness. At his feet lie the still intact stone tablets which have apparently dropped from his hands.
Relationship to the Biblical Text
The artists' choices reflect certain ambiguities in the Biblical text and different possible interpretive stances:
One or Two?
While both Tissot and Chagall portray the tablets as two connected blocks of stone, Reni depicts them as two separate tablets. Which depiction is closer to the Biblical text? The tablets are consistently referred to as "two tablets of testimony" or "two tablets of stone"4 suggesting that they were distinct slabs of stone. Why, then, do so many artists depict them as attached? This might be due to the influence of contemporary writing tablets in Late Antiquity and Medieval times which took the form of diptychs. Alternatively, the popular assumption that each tablet contained only five commandments,5 might have led artists to view each tablet alone as incomplete, and, thus, to the decision to join the two.
Throwing the Tablets
In Tissot's image, an angry Moshe is clearly about to hurl the tablets and smash them below. In Chagall's painting, in contrast, Moshe looks as if he has simply dropped the stones. What really happened? Shemot 32 states, "וַיַּשְׁלֵךְ מִיָּדָיו אֶת הַלֻּחֹת וַיְשַׁבֵּר אֹתָם תַּחַת הָהָר", which is commonly understood to mean that Moshe intentionally broke the tablets. Rashbam, though, suggests that upon seeing the golden calf, Moshe's strength left him and the tablets fell from his hands.6 Instead of focusing on Moshe's anger, Rashbam and Chagall highlight Moshe's frustration and disappointment with the nation.
Division of the Decalogue
How were the commandments written on the tablets? Of the three artists, only Reni relates to the question and both his division of the commandments into ten and how he distributes them upon each stone differ from the standard representation. Many assume that there were five commandments on each tablet,7 but Reni instead displays seven commandments on the second tablet, starting with "Honor your father…" Furthermore, he splits the prohibition against coveting into two separate commandments. Where does such a division stem from? Though the Torah states that there were ten sayings on the tablets,8 no where does it say what constituted each commandment,9 nor how these were distributed amongst the two stones,10 allowing for many possibilities.11 For elaboration, see Decalogue: Division and Design.
Shape and Size
All three artists paint the tablets as curved on top, but differ in the way they envision their overall size. While Tissot and Chagall portray the tablets as relatively small and, as a twosome, somewhat square, Reni depicts very long rectangular tablets. The Biblical text is silent on the tablets' shape and size but Rabbinic sources12 suggests that each was a square, six handbreadths in width and length, and three handbreadths in thickness. It is not clear exactly how these measurements are reached, and in fact, the only known limiting factor is related to the dimensions given for the ark which contained them.13
Horns?
Chagall portrays Moshe with two horns on his head. These are absent from the other depictions, but are a prominent feature of many renderings of Moshe. In Shemot 34, after Moshe descends with the second set of tablets, we are told, "כִּי קָרַן עוֹר פָּנָיו". Moshe's skin took on a radiant glow. The misconception that the verse speaks of a horned Moshe stems from a mistranslation in Jerome's Latin Vulgate which renders "קָרַן", as cornuta, or horn.14 It is somewhat surprising, though, that Chagall, a Jewish artist, should be influenced by the Vulgate, and it is possible that his source is actually Rashi's comments on the verse.15 When explaining the phrase, Rashi also connects the word, "קָרַן", to horns, writing, "because the light shone and protruded like horns." Chagall, thus, is likely portraying shining beams, which simply appear like horns.16