The church of Mary’s Assumption into
Heaven in Brand, Vorarlberg has a significant set of frescoes dating to the
early 16th century. The church was under construction for nearly 30
years, and consecrated in 1507. I have written about the South wall of the Parish church HERE. The frescoes of the North Wall are the focus of today's post.
As before, there are pairs of images which combine biblical scenes with saints and others, each image framed in a brick-reddish painted frame.
LEFT (Obscured Image and Noli me tangere)
The North wall has had more fading
than its South wall counterparts, especially the left-hand pair of images.
 |
Brand (Vorarlberg) frescoes: a haloed figure (above), and the Noli me tangere (below) |
The church brochure identifies this
pair as “a faded figure” above and the Risen Christ with Mary Magdalene below.
About all we can tell about the faded figure of the top panel is that it was located centrally in the
image and had a halo. However, the curious sweeping patterns behind the figure, combined with the upward gesture of the right arm, and the context of a church dedicated to the Blessed Virgin Mary incline me toward an identification of this damaged image as a likely annunciation scene.
Compare
the Brand fresco image with the Hallstatt Altar from Upper Austria by Lienhart Astl. Astl positions Gabriel above Mary, gives generous space for his wings,
raises his arm in a two-finger blessing, and has a swirl of cape to
enhance the angel's body. (Note, however, that I've flipped the image
manually to put the angel to the left; the Hallstatt altar can be seen in full glory with
its original orientation.)
So
too, the Louvre relief from the early 16th century, stemming from
Tyrol, includes a pointing finger, sweeping wings, a superior position
for Gabriel, a swirl of cape. These are common cliches in images of the
time, which is what remains of the Brand fresco seems to my eye to align with
the Annunciation most closely.
More of the lower panel has been preserved, but there's still substantial damage. The Risen Christ has a cross
in the background, and we have glimpses of the faces of the protagonists, but
the years of plaster have obscured the details of this pair of images. Given
the context, this is the
Noli me tangere, though the brochure
doesn’t explicitly make that claim.
RIGHT (Christ Emergent and Four Saints)
The other surviving fresco pair on the North Wall,
although clearer, is equally hard to interpret. The church pamphlet (Fragments,
p. 6) identifies THIS top image as an Annunciation – something we would absolutely expect in a church devoted to the Blessed Virgin. Unfortunately, this designation doesn’t seem to
match the visible attributes that survive. I think that the image is better read in a Christological context – and not just because I think that the previous image was an Annunciation scene!
 |
Brand (Vorarlberg) Fresco: Christ emerging from the tomb, with angel |
There is clearly an angel, but
situated on the right, rather than the left, of the “main figure.” The angel is
pulling aside a cloth from a rectangular object – the empty tomb? – signaling
the role of revelation or discovery.
The main figure has a dramatic pose
with right arm up-flung, unlike Mary who is typically reading or occupied in a
garden. Moreover, this standing figure holds a banner and, if I’m not mistaken,
sports a short beard. He is cloaked and hooded, with an outsized halo. He faces
away from the angel, looking not at the viewer but rather to a spot over the viewer’s
left shoulder.
Given the angel’s action, we are likely seeing Christ’s triumphant emergence from the tomb, though why this comes after
and not before the image of Christ with the Magdalene is an interesting, but
for me unanswerable, question. The presence of a tomb scene, coupled with the Harrowing of Hell on the opposite wall and the Noli me tangere nearby to this image provide a firm Crucifixion-to-Resurrection grounding for the church's imagery.
Below, we find another assortment of
saints with halos, evenly spaced.
 |
Brand (Vorarlberg) fresco: Four male saints |
The left figure is gesturing to the
group with his left hand; the next is wrapped closely in his cloak, the third
holds a short sword and wears knee-length britches, and the last is pivoted to
look at the group, his hand signaling something extraordinary, his forefinger
and little finger both point up; his thumb and the other two fingers are tucked
in. The back of his hand is toward us.
That left figure might – might – be St
Denis, who was prone to rhetorical gestures. He’s holding something in his
cupped hand; it could be a shrunken rendition of his severed head, but that is
a stretch interpretation based on knowing the story and seeing the cupped hand
around an object.
The wrapped figure might be St
Giles, a figure known for reserve and suffering. The sword-holder is most
likely Achatius, a martyred Roman military figure
The last figure with the hand
gesture is likely performing an apotropaic gesture, one designed to avert evil
or bad luck; St Vitus with his protection against seizures and demonic
possession seems the most likely candidate.
The Fourteen Emergency Saints: A Program Disrupted?
Given that the South wall started
with the three women of the “Nothelfer” saints, Margaretha, Barbara and
Katharina, and given the presence of Erasmus and other Nothelfer on the South wall, we can then read each pair of panels as including 3 or 4 of the
so-called “Vierzehn Nothelfern,” the fourteen Saints in times of need, though
only ten of the fourteen are represented here, highlighted in blue if they're extant, and purple if not:
- South Wall Left: Margaretha, Barbara and Katharina (below: Anna
and Mary)
-
South Wall Middle: Erasmus, Eustace, Cyriacus (below: Mary
Immaculata)
-
South
Wall Right: Harrowing of Hell (below: 4 Men without halos – patrons?)
-
North Wall Left: Obscured figure
(below: Christ and Magdalene)
-
North Wall Right: Christ emerging
from the tomb (below: Denis, Giles, Achatius, Vitus)
-
Presumed missing panel of the remaining four of the 14 Nothelfer: Blaise, Christopher,
George, Pantaleon
To put that another way, we have:
- 2 images of Mary (as child with her mother and as Immaculata). We lack other scenes such as the Annunciation, Visitation, Mary and John at the foot of the Cross, or Pietà .
- 3 images of Christ post-Crucifixion: the Harrowing of Hell, the Noli me Tangere, and Christ emerging from the tomb.
- 3 images that seem to include 10 of the 14 Nothelfer
- 1 image of a group of men without halos
There are a few oddities I’d like to
comment on here.
First, the idea of the Noli me tangere occurring before
the emergence from the tomb is at best strange; our images seem to be out of order.
Second, the style of that North
Wall Christ emergent is out of keeping with the rest of the program. While it
may be an artifact of restoration, the scene is almost chiaroscuro in its
rendition.
Third, the conflict of identification – annunciation or Christ
emerging from the tomb – is a signal that this particular image is problematic
in some way. Expectations are here thwarted.
And fourth, though I’m not an art
historian, and didn’t have a formal measure of tint and tone to hand when I
visited the church, the colors of the Christ emergent tend toward the green
rather than the coppery backgrounds of the other parts of the program.
What it might mean
My hypothesis is that the last set
of North Wall images might in fact have been over-painted. If the Christ
emergent had actually been a panel with the four missing Emergency Saints, the
program would be complete. Then, the order of Nothelfer up top and Christological/Mariological
below would be disrupted only for the patrons.
HYPOTHESIS: The North Wall Right might originally have been: Blaise, Christopher,
George, Pantaleon [later over-painted by Christ emerging
from the tomb] (below: Denis, Giles, Achatius, Vitus)
In that case, the intended program might have looked something like this:
This provides us with a Marian presence appropriate to a Marian church on both sides of the nave. It also completes the full program of the 14 Nothelfer by including all 14 of the 14 expected saints-in-times-of-need.
Moreover, the significantly popular
Christopher and George, missing from our current cycle, would be part of the important and complete cycle of
emergency saints. After all, they appear frequently without their companions –
more so than Blaise and Pantaleon; their omission from the set is indeed a
puzzle to be solved.
This isn't the only possible solution, of course. It is possible that the
missing four saints were on a panel which has been lost through the adaptations
of the church over time. A back wall or front wall placement would no longer be
part of our preserved legacy as the church has been adapted to its modern
usage.
Whatever has happened with the
almost-but-not-quite coherent program of the Brand church, it is clear that the
frescoes of this out-of-the-way alpine church have much to tell us about
worship in the period immediately prior to the Reformation.
CONCLUSION
The North wall of the Brand church
is more heavily damaged than its South wall counterpart, but in some ways that
makes it feel even more intimate – as though we’re glimpsing devotional
patterns that were deeply local and possibly improvised. There’s less visual
clarity, but maybe that opens a different kind of space: one for private
reflection or a more personal encounter.
The Nothelfer panel, in particular,
suggests concern for daily protection, healing, and perhaps a kind of communal
spiritual insurance policy. It's messier, less polished, but still rich with
meaning. And what we make of the so-active angel and its triumphant counterpart
figure, well, it has certainly kept me pondering through many-an-hour.
I keep thinking of Carolyn Walker
Bynum’s work on how medieval Christians engaged with materiality not as
distraction but as a conduit to the divine. These frescoes might have operated
that way too, drawing attention to the import of sacred signs (with Vitus’s
gesture) and the nearness of sacred power. Even in partial ruin, the frescoes
pull you in, and ask you, like the Magdalene, not to touch, but to witness.
WORK CITED
[Anonymous]. Parish Church “Our
Lady of the Assumption” Brand: Fragments from the Church History Chronicles of
Brand / Vorarlberg. [Undated Church Pamphlet.]
Bynum, Carolyn Walker. Christian Materiality: An Essay on Religion
in Late Medieval Europe. New York: Zone Books, 2011.
Cyrus, Cynthia. "The 1507 South Wall Frescoes of Brand’s Parish Church (Vorarlberg)" [Blog Post]. Silences and Sounds, June 6, 2025, https://silencesandsounds.blogspot.com/2025/06/the-1507-south-wall-frescoes-of-brands.html.