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Preparation for the Crucifixion
Artist: Unknown (Northern Italy)
Date: 1600s
Medium: Oil on copper
Collection: The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, Ohio, United States
What do you think happens to all the cloaks that Jedi dramatically throw to the ground before they start fighting? Those are some quality robes, there’s gotta be a market for them, no way they just leave them there and forget about them

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Preparation for the Crucifixion
Artist: Northern Italy, early 17th century
Date: Early 1600's
Medium: Oil on copper
Collection: Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, Ohio, United States
Description
Despite the religious subject, the scale and intricate detail indicate that this painting was not for a church setting. Instead, as an independent work of art, a collector would have admired its artistry and unusual combination of Italian and northern European traditions. Likewise, the subject’s novelty would have intrigued a sophisticated patron. Neither Christ’s disrobing before the Crucifixion nor the debate over the plaque identifying him as Jesus of Nazareth, King of the Jews, are common subjects in the Renaissance. Who made this work remains a mystery. The copper surface, complex composition, and atmospheric landscape imply a painter from north of the Alps, as does Christ’s sinuous body. However, the drapery, rich colors, and figures at lower right stem from Venetian Renaissance art.