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Christ on the Cross by Francisco de Zurbarán

Christ on the Cross

Francisco de Zurbarán·1655

Historical Context

This late Christ on the Cross from around 1655 continues a subject Zurbarán first treated in his breakthrough 1627 painting that launched his career when it astonished the Sevillian art world. The Crucifixion remained central to his art, and he returned to it throughout his career with varying emotional registers. Francisco de Zurbarán, working primarily for the great religious institutions of Seville and Extremadura, was the most important painter of Spanish Counter-Reformation devotional art outside Velázquez's specific domain. His distinctive treatment of religious figures — the sculptural weight of cloth, the specific quality of Spanish late-afternoon light on faces, the complete absence of sentimentality — gave his saints a spiritual gravity that served the theological requirements of post-Trent Catholicism. The austerity of his manner, its reduction of the religious figure to an almost abstract presence of devotional intensity, connects Spanish devotional practice to the medieval heritage of contemplative prayer.

Technical Analysis

The isolated figure of Christ is modeled with sculptural precision against a near-black background, following the Spanish tradition of devotional images meant to inspire meditation. Strong side-lighting creates dramatic contrasts on the anatomy.

Look Closer

  • ◆Christ's figure is the only illuminated element — darkness forces the viewer to confront the body.
  • ◆The wounds at Christ's hands and feet are rendered with anatomical restraint.
  • ◆The loincloth's fabric is carefully draped to show both the knot at the hip and the fall of cloth.
  • ◆Christ's face is turned slightly to one side in death, eyes nearly but not fully closed.

See It In Person

Basilica of La Merced, Cusco

Peru, Peru

Visit museum website →

Quick Facts

Medium
Oil paint
Dimensions
160 × 120 cm
Era
Baroque
Style
Spanish Baroque
Genre
Religious
Location
Basilica of La Merced, Cusco, Peru
View on museum website →

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Saint Romanus of Antioch and Saint Barulas by Francisco de Zurbarán

Saint Romanus of Antioch and Saint Barulas

Francisco de Zurbarán·1638

The Young Virgin by Francisco de Zurbarán

The Young Virgin

Francisco de Zurbarán·ca. 1632–33

Saint Benedict by Francisco de Zurbarán

Saint Benedict

Francisco de Zurbarán·ca. 1640–45

Christ and the Virgin in the House at Nazareth by Francisco de Zurbarán

Christ and the Virgin in the House at Nazareth

Francisco de Zurbarán·c. 1640

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Allegory of Venus and Cupid by Titian

Allegory of Venus and Cupid

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Portrait of a Noblewoman Dressed in Mourning

Jacopo da Empoli·c. 1600

Jupiter Rebuked by Venus by Abraham Janssens

Jupiter Rebuked by Venus

Abraham Janssens·c. 1612

The Flight into Egypt by Abraham Jansz. van Diepenbeeck

The Flight into Egypt

Abraham Jansz. van Diepenbeeck·c. 1650