The Crucifixion with a Carthusian Monk
Rogier van der Weyden·c. 1460
Historical Context
Rogier van der Weyden's Crucifixion with a Carthusian Monk from around 1460 depicts the moment of Christ's death witnessed by a monk in Carthusian white — one of the most severe of the Western monastic orders. The Carthusian order, founded by Saint Bruno in 1084, lived in individual hermit cells within their charterhouses, maintaining near total silence and devoting themselves to private prayer and manual work. A Carthusian monk at the foot of the Cross embodied the contemplative life's aspiration to be perpetually present to Christ's sacrifice. Rogier's late style, visible here, shows a movement toward even greater formal economy and emotional concentration than his earlier work.
Technical Analysis
Rogier's oil and gold on wood achieves devastating emotional impact through the contrast between the stark, angular figure of Christ and the swooning grief of the Virgin, with the gold ground creating an otherworldly, timeless setting.
Provenance
Private Collection, Lower Rhine, Germany; (Paul Drey, Munich, Germany); (A. S. Drey, New York, NY sold to the Cleveland Museum of Art); The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH







