
Last Supper
Historical Context
Pieter Coecke van Aelst painted this Last Supper around 1530, depicting Christ's final meal with his disciples in the monumental format appropriate for a major altarpiece commission or large devotional context. Coecke van Aelst was one of the most important Antwerp painters of his generation, combining skills as painter, tapestry designer, and architectural theorist—he translated Serlio's architectural treatise into Flemish. His Last Supper compositions show the influence of Italian Renaissance spatial organization absorbed during his Italian travels, combined with the Flemish tradition's detail and atmospheric warmth. The Last Supper was a subject of particular importance in the period of the Reformation, its connection to the Eucharist making it theologically charged and its monumental format suited to the assertion of Catholic sacramental theology.
Technical Analysis
The panel demonstrates the refined Netherlandish technique with careful surface finish, luminous color, and the meticulous rendering characteristic of the artist's workshop production.






