Caravaggio's The Entombment Of Christ (1607)

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The works of Caravaggio were created in what is known as the Baroque period and are unique in the fact that the artist used an intense form of naturalism in which he included all of a figure’s natural imperfections. It was because of this that the artist, although undoubtedly skilled at his craft, did not receive very many commissions. But this is not as to say he received none. He occasionally was hired to create works for the church, as his realism brought the religious figures and beings of the past to life for the contemporary viewer. In his captivating altarpiece, The Entombment of Christ (1607), Michelangelo Merisi de Caravaggio uses high contrast light effects, diagonals, and a strikingly shallow picture plane to create a visually dynamic scene and bring the feelings of despair out into the world of the viewer as personified by the figures.
In the painting there are six figures and the space they inhabit is rather condensed. The background is mostly dark, but what can be seen in the foreground gives the …show more content…

There is clean, vibrant white cloth draped and wrapped respectably around Christ’s private areas. The body is being held horizontally almost as it if is being cradled preciously by the two men, even if the younger of the two’s hand is digging into Christ’s open wound. This would have probably been excruciatingly painful had he been alive. When examining this detail, the body’s peaceful expression adds to it's sense of lifelessness. The body itself is lean and yet still has a muscular, almost sculptural quality to it. The viewer can see Christ’s ribcage, but the lines used to define the arms show muscular forms and even veins. These details perhaps resonated with the congregation which would in part been made up of laborers whose own bodies would resemble that of the Christ in Caravaggio's

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