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Artwork Description Mary, Don't You Weep In Mary, Don’t You Weep, Virginia Cohn Parkum presents a stark and deeply human face that carries the emotional weight of religious lament and spiritual endurance. The figure emerges from a dark hood or mantle, immediately recalling traditional depictions of the Virgin Mary in mourning. The face is rendered in pale whites and grays, while the eyes burn with raw red pigment, creating a powerful tension between restraint and suffering. The title references the African American spiritual “Mary, Don’t You Weep,” a song rooted in biblical grief and liberation. It invokes the image of Mary mourning Christ while also echoing themes of hope, deliverance, and divine justice. In this context, Parkum’s figure becomes both the grieving mother and a universal symbol of sorrow endured in faith. The red around the eyes suggests tears, exhaustion, and sleepless mourning, but it also evokes wounds — emotional and spiritual. The elongated nose and compressed mouth reinforce a sense of inward containment, as though grief is being held rather than released. This restraint is important: the figure does not collapse in despair but persists in silent endurance. The surrounding blues and blacks create a quiet, contemplative atmosphere rather than a theatrical one. The darkness does not swallow the figure; instead, it frames her presence, allowing her to emerge as a witness rather than a victim. Parkum avoids sentimentality, presenting sorrow with dignity and steadiness. Religiously, the work speaks to the paradox at the heart of Christian grief: mourning coexists with faith in redemption. The title’s reassurance don’t you weep does not deny suffering but situates it within a larger spiritual promise. The painting captures that moment between loss and consolation, where faith must hold what the heart cannot yet release. Within Parkum’s broader body of work, which often engages suffering, compassion, and liberation from pain, Mary, Don’t You Weep stands as a meditation on sacred endurance. It honors grief while suggesting that sorrow, when held within faith and compassion, becomes a passage rather than an end. The face looks outward, but its gaze feels turned inward as well — a quiet vigil, a prayer without words, and a reminder that mourning, in spiritual life, is not only an expression of loss but also an act of love. |
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Vintage Condition Disclaimer Special Condition Notes N/A |
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Provenance* 1995-2025: Virginia Cohn Parkum 2025-2026: Cordier Auctions 2026-Present: Visard Gallery *Provenance and attribution details are based on our best research and are offered in good faith but are not guaranteed. Please contact us through the contact form with any questions prior to purchase. |
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Mary, Don't You Weep - Virginia Cohn Parkum, c. 1995
$500.00
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