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Cimabue’s masterpiece “The Flagellation of Christ” (c. 1280), a painting in tempera and gold leaf on panel roughly 10 inches high by eight inches wide, has been, since its acquisition in 1950, one of ...
Only two of the other scenes are known to still exist: “The Flagellation of Christ,” part of the Frick Collection in New York; and “The Virgin and Child With Two Angels,” housed at the ...
Cimabue, three panels from an eight panel diptych (1285–90): “The Maesta,” “Christ Mocked,” and “The Flagellation” (photo by Audrey Viger, courtesy the Louvre) ...
Cimabue, The Flagellation of Christ (ca. 1280). Photo courtesy of The Frick Collection, 1950. As is often the way with Medieval artists, little is known about Cimabue, who was also known as Cenni ...
Cimabue is the pseudonym of artist Cenni di Pepo, ... Another, “The Flagellation of Christ,” can be found at the Frick Collection in New York. Ad Feedback. Ad Feedback.
Turquin believes the newly discovered Mocking of Christ was part of a small polyptych by Cimabue that also included the Flagellation of Christ and the Madonna and Child Enthroned between Two ...
Cimabue is the pseudonym of artist Cenni di Pepo, ... Another, “The Flagellation of Christ,” can be found at the Frick Collection in New York. Ad Feedback. Ad Feedback.
Cimabue is the pseudonym of artist Cenni di Pepo, born in Florence around the year 1240. ... Another, "The Flagellation of Christ," can be found at the Frick Collection in New York.