Artwork Page for The Dead Christ with Angels

Details / Information for The Dead Christ with Angels

The Dead Christ with Angels

1866–67
(French, 1832–1883)
Measurements
Image: 32.9 x 38 cm (12 15/16 x 14 15/16 in.); Plate: 39.4 x 32.9 cm (15 1/2 x 12 15/16 in.)
Catalogue raisonné
Harris 51
State
III/III
Public Domain
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Location
Not on view
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Did You Know?

This etching was the largest that Édouard Manet made.

Description

Edouard Manet often reinterpreted his own paintings as prints, using various techniques to bring his work to a broader audience. Here, he relied on a combination of aquatint and repeating marks to realistically suggest Christ’s lifeless body in the tomb where he was placed following his crucifixion. The figure’s vacant gaze and the deep shadows behind him led critics to deride the work as grotesque in its realism. The etching was the largest Manet made and, perhaps as a result, only a few impressions—including the one seen here—were made from the plate.
A vertically oriented etching and aquatint in dense black-inked lines depicts the seated Dead Christ with light skin tone, centered on a white cloth. He wears a loincloth, flanked by two winged angels. The angel on our left rests their head on a hand, while the angel on our right gazes downward. High contrast and deep shadows define the scene. In the foreground, a snake slithers near a dark stone.

The Dead Christ with Angels

1866–67

Édouard Manet

(French, 1832–1883)
France, 19th century

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