Birds — and Art?

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The monastery of Fontenay, in northern Burgundy, owes its fame to the reforming zeal of its twelfth-century founder, Saint Bernard, and to the sublime starkness of the abbey church’s Romanesque architecture.

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What few visitors notice, though, is how the medieval monks’ landscaping efforts contribute to the birdiness of the place today.

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The forests the monks so carefully maintained to provide fuel for their forge and the canals and reedy ponds they dug to supply the kitchens with fish are home to a full suite of central France’s migrant and breeding songbirds.

Aleksey Karpenko
Aleksey Karpenko

But the birds aren’t just outside. One of the few ornamental elements of the church is a thirteenth-century statue of the Virgin Mary and Christ Child, of the type known—fittingly enough in this case—as “beautiful Madonnas.”

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Some visitors might walk right past it, pausing perhaps to admire the sweetness of the Virgin’s girlish face and the elegant curve of her torso; but a closer look reveals that the smiling Christ Child in her arms holds a live bird.

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Stylized in form, and with no colorful plumage visible, the little bird is nevertheless identifiable: the Child’s pet can only be a European goldfinch. As the Smithsonian ornithologist Herbert Friedmann showed, that species served artists throughout the Middle Ages and Renaissance as a symbol of the suffering and death to come.

Raphael, Goldfinch

The stone goldfinch is just like the feathered ones the twelfth-century monks would have seen flitting around the borders of the cloister garden, and it is just like the goldfinches we watch today on the woodland edges and flower-strewn lawns of Fontenay.

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Here in Burgundy, and in so many other ancient places around the world, birds, art, and history come together to form a landscape that is far more than the sum of its separate parts. All it takes is the eye to see it.

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