Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Christ at Emmaus

View through Harvard Museums
Department of Prints John Witt Randall bequest to his sister. Belinda Lull Randall gift to Harvard University 1892. sister of John Witt Randall Harvard Art Museums/Fogg Museum Gift of Belinda L. Randall from the collection of John Witt Randall
image-zoom
Title: Christ at Emmaus
Description not available.

Related Results

The Risen Christ
The Risen Christ
This panel depicting The Risen Christ was formerly in the collection of the Pusterla della Porta family in Milan, where it is recorded from 1590 until the first quarter of the 20th...
Christ with the Cross
Christ with the Cross
Christ holding the cross was a motif that El Greco derived from the narrative of Christ’s Passion, creating an isolated image that seems to have been extremely popular with his cli...
Dinner in Emmaus - Supper at Emmaus
Dinner in Emmaus - Supper at Emmaus
Caravaggio painted the Supper at Emmaus between 1605 and 1606, that is to say between the end of his stay in Rome and his flight from the city following his conviction for murder. ...
X-radiograph(s) of "Christ at Emmaus"
X-radiograph(s) of "Christ at Emmaus"
X-Radiograph Description: 2 details Burroughs Number: 1875 X-Radiograph(s) of: Artist: Tiepolo, Giovanni Battista, Italian, 1696-1770 Title: Christ at Emmaus Owner: Louvr...
X-radiograph(s) of "Christ at Emmaus"
X-radiograph(s) of "Christ at Emmaus"
Burroughs Number: 1968 X-Radiograph(s) of: Artist: Velazquez, Diego, Spanish, 1599-1660 Title: Christ at Emmaus Date: ca.1620 Owner: Metropolitan Museum, New York Object N...
Diptych with symbols of the Virgin and Redeeming Christ: Christ with the Cross as Redemptor Mundi (Right wing)
Diptych with symbols of the Virgin and Redeeming Christ: Christ with the Cross as Redemptor Mundi (Right wing)
This pair of panels formed part of a large ensemble of which the other subjects are now unknown. Within the Museum’s collection they are among the most iconographically interesting...

Back to Top