The Resurrection, from "The Passion of Christ"
Jan Muller Netherlandish
After Lucas van Leyden Netherlandish
Not on view
Towards the end of the sixteenth and early in the seventeenth century, Dutch Mannerists turned their attention to the Netherlandish master Lucas van Leyden and other northern Renaissance artists, creating a revival of interest in their works. Printmakers copied these earlier designs or made new compositions emulating the style of their predecessors. In about 1615-20, Jan Muller engraved copies of Lucas van Leyden’s 1521 series of the Passion of Christ, fourteen engravings illustrating Christ’s final days, from The Last Supper to The Resurrection. Muller’s copies are so deceptive that it takes extremely close looking and sometimes magnification to distinguish them from Lucas’s originals.
In The Resurrection, the fourteenth plate, Christ bursts from the tomb, carried aloft on a celestial cloud and holding a banner representing his victory. The surrounding guards react in fear and horror.
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