• The Head of Christ is a 1648 painting by the Dutch artist Rembrandt, based on a Jewish model and thus marking a turning-point in the artist's work.
  • Christ, torn between meditation and infinite weariness, emerges in all his truth. – The answer to the enigma of whether Rembrandt painted his Christ “from life”...
  • Many versions of the Head of Christ exist, the one chosen here is now in the Gemäldegalerie in Berlin.
  • <i>Head of Christ</i>. The figure of Christ here was intended to express suffering and abandonment.
  • We collected 33+ Head Of Christ paintings in our online museum of paintings - PaintingValley.com.
  • A 1656 inventory lists a picture hanging in Rembrandt's studio as "a head of Christ, done from life," perhaps evidence that Rembrandt used his neighbors in the...
  • By far the most popular of Sallman’s pictures, the Head of Christ has been reproduced more than 500 million times according to its publishers (Kriebel & Bates).
  • 1.3K. 1. Head of Christ facing right by Rembrandt. ... Head of Christ (after 'Dinner at Emmaus' in Louvre) by Rembrandt.
  • This intimate image of Christ’s head, intended for private devotion, derives from a lost picture of the Holy Face by Jan van Eyck, now known only through copies.
  • The following year, 1864, saw the publication of Manet's painting of The Head of Christ. The close connections between Renan's best-selling biography of Jesus...
  • Rembrandt's Head of Christ dates from 1648, and is one of a series of pictures painted by Rembrandt and his studio in the late 1640s, using the same model.
  • Rembrandt painted this subject a number of times; three examples, one described as "Een Christus tonie nae't leven" ("a head of Christ done from life," that is...
  • In the Cold War, “The blond hair and blue eyes” of Sallman’s Head of Christ “provided solace and safety in a world gone mad.”