Artwork Page for The Passion: The Flagellation

Details / Information for The Passion: The Flagellation

The Passion: The Flagellation

c. 1480
(German, c. 1450–1491)
Culture
Germany
Medium
engraving
Catalogue raisonné
Lehrs V.136.22
Public Domain
You can copy, modify, and distribute this work, all without asking permission. Learn more about CMA's Open Access Initiative.
Location
Not on view
?

Did You Know?

The assorted and detailed set of grisly scourges included in this scene was likely meant to elicit a deep meditation on Christ's physical suffering from the viewer.

Description

Martin Schongauer's series of the Passion of Christ was his largest set of engravings, made around 1480, and extensively copied across Europe. It consists of twelve prints detailing the suffering of Christ in the last days of his life. Schongauer's version focuses on crowded scenes, grotesque physiognomies of Christ's tormentors, and great pathos in the compositions. Here, Jesus is bound to the column by one persecutor while three others are about to flagellate him with a set of different scourges. A fourth, to the left, prepares the crown of thorns.
A vertically oriented print in black ink depicts a slender, bearded man tied to a central column, wearing only a loincloth. His head tilts down with a pained expression. To our left, a man raises a bundle of twigs while another crouches below holding a thorny crown. To our right, three figures surround him; one raises a whip while another pulls a rope around his ankles. Rumpled cloth lies in the foreground above a monogram.

The Passion: The Flagellation

c. 1480

Martin Schongauer

(German, c. 1450–1491)
Germany

See Also

Visually Similar by AI

Contact Us

The information about this object, including provenance, may not be currently accurate. If you notice a mistake or have additional information about this object, please fill out the appropriate request form linked below:

Update or Correct Artwork Information

Imagery or Rights for Non-Open-Access Artworks

Report a Website Issue

Further Questions About This Artwork