The Hundred Guilder Print, c.1647-1649, State 2 of 2. 278 x 388 mm The Hundred Guilder Print is an etching with drypoint by Rembrandt, measuring 278 x 388 mm (platemark). [1] The etching's popular name derives from the large sum of money supposedly charged for it.
It is also called Christ healing the sick, [2] Christ with the Sick around Him, Receiving Little Children, [3] or Christ preaching. Jesus is the ultimate miraculous, salvific figure, presented here according to the evangelical story of Matthew ("Jesus left Galilee and went into the region of Judea to the other side of the Jordan. Large crowds followed Him, and He healed them there", Matthew 19:1-2).
Rembrandt joins together different episodes in a single scene, squaring them up against a personal and organic endeavour. Carl Heinrich Bloch (1834-1890), Christ Healing the Sick at Bethesda, 1883, oil on canvas, 100 3/4 x 125 1/2 inches. Brigham Young University Museum of Art, purchased with funds provided by Jack R.
and Mary Lois Wheatley. CARL HEINRICH BLOCH (1834-1890) This altarpiece depicts one of Christ's miracles from the Gospel of John. In this masterpiece, Rembrandt offers a unique interpretation of a chapter from the Bible by grouping all the figures, rich and poor, young and old, healthy and sick, around Jesus.
In the technical execution, he achieved previously unseen nuances in shades of grey, ranging from velvety black, through grey, to almost white. And, at Jesus' feet is the reclining woman from one of his. The Museum's Christ Healing the Sick of 1742, which illustrates a passage from the Gospel of Matthew (19:2), combines and reformulates figural and architectural motifs from two prints by Rembrandt, to which Dietrich had access in the royal print cabinet in Dresden.
Christian Art Man is ordered to the good, the true, and the beautiful because, as the Catholic Church teaches, in such things we encounter God. This is a painting and an image of divine mercy. As my good friend, Patrick van der Vorst, at Christian Art writes, the painting is capturing the moment where Jesus "picked the one lonely man to heal" and that it was the man's helplessness which.
Christ Healing the Sick in the Temple Christ Healing the Sick in the Temple, 1811, Oil on Canvas Benjamin West (Anglo-American, 1738 - 1820) #2001.0003.0119 This painting is a highlight in the Pennsylvania Hospital collection. In 1800 the Pennsylvania Hospital Board of Managers wrote to Benjamin West (then historical painter to King George III) requesting that he "paint something" for. Palm Branch Spanish Art Hermitage Museum Jesus Heals Hieronymus Bosch Adam And Eve John The Baptist.
Based on a biblical subject from the Christian New Testament, the scene boasts an awestruck crowd witnessing a miracle performed by Jesus Christ. A man and his attendants seek healing as they form a triangular arrangement and lower themselves at the feet of Christ, who stands at the apex with outstretched arms. This painting shows one of the seven acts of charity described in the Gospel of Matthew and was part of a series that Murillo painted for the church of the Hospital de la Caridad in Seville.
The Caridad was a charitable brotherhood dedicated to helping the poor and sick of the city; Murillo himself was a member. The pool of Bethesda in Jerusalem was periodically visited by an angel, and.