• ILikeBoobies@lemmy.ca
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    20 days ago

    Because he was drawn by Europeans

    Just like Black/Yellow Jesus existing in those populations

    You ask someone to draw a person, they will likely draw someone resembling people they see. If you tell an artist a thousand years ago “from the middle east” they will say what’s that

    Then you just propagate those depictions

        • undergroundoverground@lemmy.world
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          20 days ago

          Lol, its not that I didn’t understand or that I missed it. It’s that I disagree that its a cogent reason.

          When I was young, I used to draw pictures of people with stick bodies and round heads. They were also often bright or powder pink in colour. I propagated the shit out of that too.

          Then, when I found out that wasn’t the correct way to draw people or the natural colour of human skin, I stopped drawing them and colouring quite so comedically ridiculous.

          Why can’t the people who draw Jesus manage this?

          • antonim@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            20 days ago

            The comparison with your own childish vs adult drawings is simply off the mark. A more similar comparison could be provided by how artists depict the Vikings. It is well known today that the helmet with bull horns is made-up, and was probably never used by actual Vikings. Yet tons of people still portray them with such helmets, and most non-artists still have that same association in their minds. Why? Because a child growing up and developing their observational and artistic skills is not the same as a culture with its century-old symbols and images.

            Admittedly the depictions of Jesus in art today are frequently done by more or less amateurish artists and are meant to be traditional in their style, which additionally makes them less likely to move away from the inherited imagery.