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In this baroque Christian altarpiece that Anton Raphael Mengs painted for the Catholic church, the Colegiata of Castrojeriz, which is near Burgos, Spain, the Madonna is holding an open book. The angel…
Contributor:
Anton Raphael Mengs
Places:
Madrid, Spanish Empire (Madrid, Spain)
Date:
1767
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When Max Liebermann first exhibited this painting, it caused not only a sensation but a scandal. Some critics objected to a Jew daring to depict Jesus, and they were offended by Liebermann’s realistic…
Contributor:
Max Liebermann
Places:
Munich, Germany
Date:
1879
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Maurycy Gottlieb saw his art as essential to his universalist vision, namely, as a way to improve Polish-Jewish relations. As he said, “I am a Jew and a Pole and, God willing, I want to serve both.”…
Contributor:
Maurycy Gottlieb
Places:
Rome, Kingdom of Italy (Rome, Italy)
Date:
1878–1879
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One of Friedrich Friedländer’s best-known paintings, The Death of Tasso, depicts the death of the Italian poet Torquato Tasso (1544–1595). Tasso was famous for his epic poem, La Gerusalemme liberate (…
Contributor:
Friedrich Friedländer
Places:
Vienna, Austria
Date:
Date Unknown, 18th century
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The Christian parable of the prodigal son, from Luke 15:11–12, was a favorite subject of artists from the seventeenth through the nineteenth century. A son squanders his inheritance and is reduced to…
Contributor:
Henry Mosler
Places:
Paris, France
Date:
1879
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Calvary was not the first time Marc Chagall portrayed the crucifixion in a painting, and it would not be the last. Chagall saw the crucifixion of Jesus Christ as a symbol of Jewish suffering. In this…
Contributor:
Marc Chagall
Places:
Paris, France
Date:
1912