The Holy Virgin Mary, mixed-media painting on linen that was created in 1996 by British artist Chris Ofili. The painting, one of Ofili’s earliest artworks, created a sensation and brought the artist both fame and notoriety.
Ofili, whose parents had immigrated to Britain from Nigeria, attended Roman Catholic schools as a child. From 1988 to 1991, he studied at London’s Chelsea School of Art before going on to the Royal College of Art from 1991 to 1993. He was awarded a scholarship in 1992 to attend an international workshop in Zimbabwe, where he also spent time studying cave paintings—an experience that was a turning point in his art. Ofili’s reputation grew after a series of exhibitions at the Saatchi Gallery in London, in particular the “Sensation” exhibition, which traveled to several venues beginning in 1997. The following year, Ofili was awarded the Turner Prize, the most prestigious British art award.
The Holy Virgin Mary was one of the pieces in the “Sensation” exhibit. It is a work that shows how the painter draws inspiration from his African origins. This painted collage consists of multiple layers of oil paint, resin, glitter, and elephant dung. It depicts the Virgin Mary in an unconventional manner. The African Madonna, dressed in a traditional blue robe, emerges from a surreal yellow-orange background, surrounded by close-ups of female genitalia cut from pornographic magazines. They were incorporated to reference the cherubs that traditionally accompany the Virgin Mary, and these are among the elements that provoke accusations that the painting is blasphemous. The Virgin’s bared breast is made of dried, varnished elephant dung, and the large painting is supported by two large balls of the same substance, a way of connecting the work with the African landscape.
In 1999, during its display in the United States as part of the “Sensation” exhibition, the painting was one of several works that sparked several acts of vandalism as well as a legal battle between Rudolph Giuliani, then the mayor of New York City, and the host venue, the Brooklyn Museum, as to whether the exhibition could go ahead—it did. The Holy Virgin Mary was acquired in 2018 by New York City’s Museum of Modern Art.