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Christ at Emmaus by Rembrandt, 1648, Louvre. Both the encounter on the road and the ensuing supper have been depicted in art, but the supper has received more attention. Medieval art tends to show a moment before Jesus is recognized; Christ wears a large floppy hat to help explain the initial lack of recognition by the disciples.
In 1863, he settled on the outskirts of Lucerne, and rarely left for any extended period of time after that. Between 1867 and 1877, his religious faith began to appear as biblical motifs in his pictures, such as The Road to Emmaus (1877). In 1882 he completed Der Eichenwald (The Oak Forest), one of his best known works. The image was based on ...
The Supper at Emmaus is a painting by the Italian Baroque master Caravaggio, executed in 1601, and now in London. It depicts the Gospel story of the resurrected Jesus 's appearance in Emmaus . Originally this painting was commissioned and paid for by Ciriaco Mattei , brother of cardinal Girolamo Mattei .
Paolo Veronese's Supper at Emmaus is a large 241×415 cm (8×14 feet) oil painting on canvas. [1]It depicts the biblical Gospel story of the resurrected Christ appearing on the road to Emmaus – and being finally recognized by two of his disciples who were on a pilgrimage to Emmaus, as he blesses the bread at a meal they had invited him, an apparent stranger, to. [2]
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Bill Hutto and Joshua Rieff, who say that is the main lesson in the story of the Road to Emmaus in Luke 24:13-35 and Mark 16:12-13 where the disciple Cleopas and an unidentified disciple are ...
Conversion of Saint Paul on the Road to Damascus: Rome, Cerasi Chapel: 230 × 175 cm Oil on canvas: 1601: Still Life with Flowers and Fruit: Rome, Borghese: 105 × 184 cm Oil on canvas: Attributed to Painter of the Hartford Still Life 1602: Supper at Emmaus: London, National Gallery: 139 × 195 cm Oil on canvas: 1602: Amor Victorious: Berlin ...
Pilgrims at Emmaus, 169 x 244 cm, c. 1533–1534 (Louvre, INV 746). The Pilgrims at Emmaus (French: Les Pèlerins d'Emmaüs), also called the Supper at Emmaus (Le Souper à Emmaüs), is a painting by Titian, made about 1533 or 1534, which hangs in the Louvre in Paris.