
Le Christ au tombeau
Historical Context
The Master of the Osservanza was a Sienese painter of the 1430s–50s once tentatively identified with the young Sano di Pietro but now regarded as a distinct artistic personality closely connected to Sassetta. His Christ in the Tomb (Le Christ au tombeau) follows the imago pietatis tradition — the half-length dead Christ in the tomb, displaying his wounds — which was the central image of late medieval Passion devotion and the most common subject for private devotional panels in Siena and Florence. The Osservanza Master's version is distinguished by the unusually tender emotional quality he brought to Passion subjects.
Technical Analysis
The Master of the Osservanza renders the half-length Christ with a pale, alabaster-smooth finish that gives the dead body an almost sculptural quality, recalling the polychrome wooden pietà figures common in Sienese churches. The blood traces from the wounds are rendered with careful vermilion detail against the white burial cloth.
See It In Person
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