The Wall Painting of the Madonna and Child, St. Mary, Belchamp Walter
Since starting this project I have gathered more information on the Wall Paintings from a number of sources.
The Wall Painting of St. Mary - thepaintedchurch - Anne Marshall - Associate Lecturer (retired),
Open University
Below is the text from Anne's website:
Tristram has a brief description of this particularly beautiful painting of the Virgin
suckling the Christ Child, but only part of it was visible to him before it was restored by Eve Baker
for the Pilgrim Trust in 1962.
The footnote says that the information above was from the information sheet that was in the Church -
Author of the information sheet was stated as "unknown".
The guide was written by S. P. Raymond
around 1964 and as far as is known there was no mention of Tristram.
The figures of the Virgin and the Child, along with the elaborate canopy above the Virgin’s head, need little
elucidation,
beyond suggesting that this is a more obviously ‘devotional’ painting than those at either Beckley
(linked to a theme of Judgement and retribution) or Faversham (part of a Nativity series). There might once
have been an altar below the painting, as suggested by Eve Baker, especially since censing angels were once
visible on either side of the central group of figures.
There is certainly another figure visible – kneeling or standing at the lower right, with upraised hands.
Mrs Baker also suggested that this might be the patron praying his rosary (there is a group of red dots that
might be rosary beads). The church was in the patronage of the Benedictine Priory of Earl’s Colne in the 14th century,
and this figure might indeed be the donor of the painting. A faint suggestion of a tonsure on the kneeling man would
support the idea, but I am nevertheless uncertain.
The unique feature here though is the inclusion of two perching birds. A small falcon or hawk, possibly a kestrel
or perhaps a sparrowhawk, appropriate to a cleric (the Canon Law prohibition on hawking by priests was widely flouted),
is on the central pinnacle of the canopy over the Virgin’s head, and a smaller bird on the left-hand
(onlooker’s viewpoint)
finial of her throne. As well as these, there is a suggestion that the kneeling figure is holding up before the
Virgin something that might be another bird, with narrow tapering wings held upright. An alternative or additional
possibility then is that this a man, donor or not, offering up an image of a hawk along with prayers for the healing
of a real one, as in the well-documented 1368 case of Nicholas de Litlington, Abbot of Westminster³.
At any rate it is hard to escape the feeling that the birds in this painting must have more than merely decorative
significance.
Apart from the two paintings linked above on this page, there are very few other examples of the Virgin suckling the
Christ Child left in the English parish church; the only other one known to me, at Great Canfield, also in Essex,
will be here soon. All four of them show the Virgin crowned as Queen of Heaven and with loose hair, as here.
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Anne Marshall - Associate Lecturer (retired), Open University
In keeping with other pages on this website I quote many sources and sometimes make a copy of the sources text on
this website. You will notice that the quoted text is in green panel, my original text (like this) is in the default
text of the website.
What Anne Marshall says about her "Developing Catalogue":
"
This site represents the continuing development of what may one day become a comprehensive catalogue. Vast quantities
of Medieval Wall Painting have been lost forever, of course, but there is nevertheless more left on English church walls
than is generally realised; paintings continue to be uncovered and more still are known to exist under layers of plaster.
Some of these will come to light one day; in fact some are already doing so, as at Houghton-on-the-Hill,
near Swaffham in Norfolk and Ilketshall St Andrew in Suffolk.
"
Anne also credits Roy Reed of ReedDesign, for the web design and contributions. I have no intention of competing with
either of them and encourage you to visit their website (links below)
tempusfugit.me.uk concurs with Anne Marshall that the Medieval Wall Paintings,
many lost forever, need to be sort-out(ed) [found] and documented.