Artwork Page for The Round Passion: Christ Presented to the People

Details / Information for The Round Passion: Christ Presented to the People

The Round Passion: Christ Presented to the People

1509
(Netherlandish, 1494–about 1533)
Medium
engraving
Catalogue raisonné
Hollstein 63
Public Domain
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Location
Not on view

Description

Because Lucas van Leyden usually carved his copper plates with thin, shallow lines, the plates wore down quickly; impressions this fine are especially rare. He engraved several versions of the scene of Christ presented to the people, focusing on the moment at which Christ was condemned to die on the cross. Here, he placed Christ in a shallow vestibule before an angry mob within a town and landscape setting that could be 16th-century Europe. This is one of nine engravings of the Passion of Christ in an unusual round shape; the prints feature a decorative border that was printed from a separate ring-shaped plate.
A circular print in black ink features an ornate border of foliage and winged children. Within, Christ stands bound and crowned with thorns on a platform to our right. A man in a turban gestures toward a crowd on our left, while a child sits on the steps below. Repeated, hatched lines create shadows throughout. In the background, a castle sits atop a distant hill, and a scroll at the top reads 1509.

The Round Passion: Christ Presented to the People

1509

Lucas van Leyden

(Netherlandish, 1494–about 1533)
Netherlands, 16th century

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