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  2. Pietà - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pietà

    However, in practice works called a Pietà may include angels, the other figures usual in Lamentations, and even donor portraits. [ 1 ] An image consisting only of a dead Christ with angels is also called a Pietà, at least in German, where Engelpietà (literally "Angel Pietà") is the term for what is usually called Dead Christ supported by ...

  3. Lamentation of Christ - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lamentation_of_Christ

    The Lamentation of Christ [1] is a very common subject in Christian art from the High Middle Ages to the Baroque. [2] After Jesus was crucified , his body was removed from the cross and his friends mourned over his body.

  4. Lamentation (Pietà) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lamentation_(Pietà)

    Lamentation (Pietà) (also Lamentation Over The Dead Christ) is an oil painting on panel of the common subject of the Lamentation of Christ that is now regarded as by an artist in the "circle" of the Early Netherlandish painter Petrus Christus, rather than by Christus himself.

  5. The Deposition (Michelangelo) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Deposition_(Michelangelo)

    The Deposition (also called the Bandini Pietà or The Lamentation over the Dead Christ) is a marble sculpture by the Italian High Renaissance master Michelangelo.The sculpture, on which Michelangelo worked between 1547 and 1555, depicts four figures: the dead body of Jesus Christ, newly taken down from the Cross, Nicodemus [1] (or possibly Joseph of Arimathea), Mary Magdalene and the Virgin Mary.

  6. Pietà (Bramantino) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pietà_(Bramantino)

    Pietà or Lamentation over the Dead Christ is a fragment of a lunette fresco of c. 1475–1500 by the Italian Renaissance painter and architect Bramantino, originally over the door of the church of San Sepolcro in Milan and now in the Pinacoteca Ambrosiana in the same city.

  7. Pietà (Southern German, Cloisters) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pietà_(Southern_German...

    Images of the Virgin cradling the body of her son in her arms and lap are known as "Pietà", and were a popular devotional subject in the later Middle Ages from the 13th century, especially in nunneries, possibly under Byzantine influence, [7] as a form of the Lamentation of Christ.

  8. Pietas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pietas

    Pietas erga parentes (" pietas toward one's parents") was one of the most important aspects of demonstrating virtue. Pius as a cognomen originated as way to mark a person as especially "pious" in this sense: announcing one's personal pietas through official nomenclature seems to have been an innovation of the late Republic, when Quintus Caecilius Metellus Pius claimed it for his efforts to ...

  9. The Dead Christ Supported by the Virgin Mary and St John the ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Dead_Christ_Supported...

    The paintings dates to the period where Bellini began to outgrow the artistic influence of Andrea Mantegna, his brother-in-law.Via the Sampieri collection in Bologna (catalogue no. 454), it entered Brera in 1811 as a gift from the viceroy of the Eugene de Beauharnais's Kingdom of Italy.It was placed in the corridor of Venetian Renaissance paintings that leads into the room set up by Ermanno ...