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Flagellation of Christ

URI
https://dspaceglam7.4science.cloud/handle/123456789/113
Date Issued
1458
Author(s)
Piero della Francesca 
Pittore
Abstract
The Flagellation of Christ (probably 1468–1470) is a painting by Piero della Francesca in the Galleria Nazionale delle Marche in Urbino, Italy. Called by one writer an "enigmatic little painting,"[1] the composition is complex and unusual, and its iconography has been the subject of widely differing theories. Kenneth Clark called The Flagellation "the greatest small painting in the world".
Physical Description
The theme of the picture is the Flagellation of Christ by the Romans during his Passion. The biblical event takes place in an open gallery in the middle distance, while three figures in the foreground on the right-hand side apparently pay no attention to the event unfolding behind them. The panel is much admired for its use of linear perspective and the air of stillness that pervades the work, and it has been given the epithet "the Greatest Small Painting in the World" by the art historian Kenneth Clark.

The painting is signed under the seated emperor OPVS PETRI DE BVRGO S[AN]C[T]I SEPVLCRI – "the work of Piero of Borgo Santo Sepolcro" (his town).

The Flagellation is particularly admired for the realistic rendering of the hall in which the flagellation scene is situated in relation to the size of the figures and for the geometrical order of the composition. The portrait of the bearded man at the front is considered unusually intense for Piero's time.
Path
Flagellazione 
Event
Concilio di Mantova 
Concilio di Ferrara 
File(s)
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Thumbnail Image
Name

1829.jfif

Size

3.76 MB

Format

JPEG

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  • Relations
Path
Flagellazione 
Event
Concilio di Mantova 
Concilio di Ferrara 
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