In This Case: Godly Susan

Media - 1992.84 - SAAM-1992.84_1 - 11538
Roger Medearis, Godly Susan, 1941, egg tempera on board, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of Roger and Elizabeth Medearis, 1992.84
Bridget Callahan
Luce Program Coordinator
March 3, 2009

Many art history students are taught to look closely at portraits to derive meaning from the subject’s body language, the other objects the artist includes, and even they way these objects are arranged. The Luce Foundation Center has a wonderful portrait, Godly Susan, which is a perfect subject for this kind of close reading. Susan sits in the foreground in a wooden chair among flowers and plants. A white church is just over her shoulder in the background. One of the most interesting details in the painting is the lemon that Susan holds in her left hand. So what are we to make of Godly Susan? Who is she and what is the artist, Roger Medearis, trying to tell us about her? What does the lemon mean?

The bright yellow fruit always elicits questions from visitors—its bright color pulls their eyes into the painting as they pass the case. Medearis skillfully directs our attention to it with the way he positions it in Susan's left hand. Her right hand even points to it. Lemons were frequently included in seventeenth-century Dutch still life paintings among other foods, rich fabrics, and fine gold and silver vessels. The variety of objects allowed artists to show their ability to depict different textures. Another reading is provided by Patrick De Rynck who writes in his book How to Read a Painting: Lessons from the Old Masters, "Lemons were said to be an antidote to the poisons lurking in a variety of places, not least the gold and silver of expensive serving dishes." In this interpretation, lemons, which were believed to have certain medicinal qualities, could protect someone from poisons, both real and spiritual.

In fact, the woman in the painting is the artist’s grandmother. He titled the painting Godly Susan because she was the granddaughter, daughter, and mother of Baptist ministers, including the artist’s father. Medearis painted this portrait on the sun porch of his father’s church; he added the church to the background later. He includes the lemon for two reasons: lemons were one of Susan’s favorite fruits—she enjoyed the sour taste. And several years before Medearis painted this portrait, Susan had suffered a stroke that left the right side of her body paralyzed. She holds the lemon in her left hand, which provides a strong contrast to her right hand resting limply on her chair.

The choices artists make about what to include in their work and how to do it are very interesting, whether they are part of a larger, moral message or something more personal. You can make a close reading of a painting by simply looking, but there are some things that cannot be uncovered without doing a little more research. Maybe you'll need to pull out an old art history textbook, or do some reading on the artist. Everything is intentional!

 

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