Over the next month, I'll be offering thoughts on the Nativity set model, a large papercraft crèche that you can find and download here:
https://gumroad.com/l/ThkR
Advent Calendar Day 7: The Heavenly Host
Archangels
I wrote up my reasoning behind the design of the archangels
back on day 4, but I ought to elaborate on why I picked four (three of whom are
shown together here):
It’s because I’m lazy.
I’ve heard the four-archangel number thrown around since I
first became interested in this stuff back in college. Four is an absolutely fantastic number when
it comes to an ensemble, especially if the personalities vary drastically,
which I expect they would here. Three is
great if you have a protagonist and side characters, but if you want narrative
equality amongst your group with the lean efficiency of a minimal group dynamic,
four is the ideal; it’s why I use a gang of four in the Creeps books.
The Catholic Church only recognizes three (the ones pictured
in the middle here): Michael, Gabriel, and Raphael, the only ones mentioned by
name in the canonical scriptures. But
Raphael’s mention, in the Book of Tobit (recognized in orthodox Christian traditions
but not officially in Judaic ones), says “I am Raphael, one
of the seven angels who stand ready and enter
before the glory of the Lord.” So where
does four come from?
Angel stuff is all
over the place in the Bible, and extra-Biblical sources. These four come from our earliest (and
richest source) of angelography, the Book of Enoch. Enoch wasn’t canonized as part of the old
testament/Tanakh (the primary conflict in its inclusion probably the
then-radical notion that angels might rebel against God), though it WAS widely
read and oft-cited (it’s quoted in Jude and mentioned in the non-canonical
Epistle of Barnabus), and has informed much of the theology and myth that
surround angels.
So you could go with four, or seven, or
ten, or one (the generally accepted possibilities), but like I said, four has
the best and most convenient narrative possibility, and that’s where I like to set
my tent. Uriel, of course, isn’t on
hand; he’s spiriting John away.
Seraphim
Seraphim are a class of angel mentioned
in Enoch (surprise!), Isaiah, and Revelation, and their name means “burning
ones,” so I drew ‘em as angels by way of the Human Torch. They’re described as having six wings (one
pair to cover their face in the presence of God, the other their feet, ‘cause
feet are dirty).
Art note – I drew the angels in pen,
but did color holds on the seraphim in the computer to turn the line art red
for the first row and orange for those in the back. I then watercolored the color-printed line
art. I’m happy with the results and will
likely employ them in the future.
Cherubim
The blue cherubim (the plural form of
cherub, culturally recognized as chubby nude babies with feathery wings) are
described in Ezekiel. Six-winged again,
though since “feet” is sometimes a biblical euphemism for private parts I
hedged my bet and threw their middle pair at crotch-level. The four animal faces (ox, eagle, lion, and
man) come from a popular assumption that the four cherubs seen by Ezekiel are
the four “living creatures” described by John R in Revelations are the same
quartet.
Now, these may seem like unusual angel
drawings, but I’m actually playing it pretty conservatively; I’m leaving out
the whole covered-in-eyes thing and I’m not making hands grow out of anyone’s
armpits. There’s only so much one can do
design-wise before you completely sever the connection between subject and
audience, and I feel like I pushed these as far as I could go without doing so.
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