Giovanni di Paolo, the author of this dramatic work, was a remarkably sensitive artist. He used a rich palette to paint a wide range of religious subjects in a visionary, expressionistic manner. His highly personal style represents the transition between the Gothic and the Renaissance period in Siena.
ProvenancePurchased, Wildenstein & co., New York, 1964 Label TextChrist's death on the cross is a central motif of Christian art. This example, by the fifteenth-century Sienese painter Giovanni di Paolo, is sensitively realised. The stylised figure of Christ, painted in tempera on gold, indicates the artist’s connection to the Late-Gothic tradition of painting. Six angels, incised into the gold background, flank Christ’s body. One angel catches the blood that falls from Christ’s side in a chalice; Christians believe that the blood of Christ holds redemptive powers, and this motif foretells the sacrament of Communion.
