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Holy card depicting the Sacred Heart of Jesus, c. 1880.Auguste Martin collection, University of Dayton Libraries. The Sacred Heart is often depicted in Christian art as a flaming heart [5] shining with divine light, pierced by the lance-wound, encircled by the crown of thorns, surmounted by a cross, and bleeding.
From out of a central stalk of rue serving as its base, there radiate multiple branches which appear to blossom into various designs; the divergent branches "sprout" at their extremities such magical symbols as: a rose; a hand holding either a wand or a sword; a flaming heart; a fish; a crescent moon; a snake; an owl; a plumed medieval helmet ...
The outer steel structure mimics the intricate vasculature and predominant veins and arteries. Above the heart chambers, the aortic arch shoots pulses of fire into the night sky. [12] The sculpture was displayed at the SOMArts Cultural Center in San Francisco in 2016 as part of an event promoting a Flaming Lotus Girls photo calendar. [11]
Heart With Arrow. Thanks to its association with the Roman god Cupid, who shot mortals with arrows to make them fall in love, a heart pierced in such a way symbolizes romantic devotion.
' horse bone ') is one of the 16 yōkai depicted in the Tosa Obake Zōshi, drawn during the Edo period; it appears as a skeletal, flaming horse, claimed to be the spirit of a horse that perished in a fire. [1]
9. ️🔥 Heart on Fire ️🔥 Arguably the most overtly sexy emoji, this relative newcomer to the gang represents a flaming hot passion—a “burning love,” if you wanna get Elvis with it.
Standing Buddha with a halo, 1st–2nd century AD (or earlier), Greco-Buddhist art of Gandhara Jesus and nine of the Twelve Apostles depicted with "Floating" disk haloes in perspective (detail from The Tribute Money, illustrating Matthew 17:24–27, by Masaccio, 1424, Brancacci Chapel)
Flaming from parting's fire, flowing with the fluid of the eyes, / On a sigh's wind, twenty-four hours a day, her heart flies. Thus, although in one sense a devotional work, the couplets are meant to be judged mainly as expressions of poetic virtuosity and secondarily as expressions of devotion and love.