David Samuel Stern

David Samuel Stern

Thursday, June 5, 2025

Mary Magdalene for The New Yorker 

The May 26 issue of The New Yorker features a Woven Portrait, commissioned by the magazine, to accompany Michael Pollan's article "High Priests: What religious leaders learned from taking magic mushrooms" (also goes by the title "This Is Your Priest on Drugs"). 

David describes, "I received this commission during my term as an artist-in-residence at Cité internationale des arts in Paris, so I didn't have access to my full-time studio in New York, nor my normal assortment of tools and equipment, that I would ordinarily use to make a Woven Portrait. Discussing this issue and the article and general with Supriya, I suggested photographing the statue of Mary Magdalene that serves as part of the dramatic altarpiece of L'église de la Madeleine in Paris. (The array of statues that make up the altarpiece is collectively titled "The Ecstasy of Mary Magdalene", completed by Carlo Marochetti in 1841.) To me the statue seems to depict a deeply spiritual experience—one that is not necessarily specifically Christian in nature. As an iconic yet relatable female saint, Mary Magdalene also seemed a very appropriate subject."