Crucifixion (Antonello da Messina)

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The Sibiu Crucifixion
ArtistAntonello da Messina
Year1454-1455
TypeOil on wood
Dimensions39 cm × 23.5 cm (15 in × 9.3 in)
LocationBrukenthal National Museum
Sibiu, Romania

The Crucifixion is the subject of three different paintings by the Italian Renaissance master Antonello da Messina; the first one was completed around 1454/1455, the second and the third in 1475. They are housed in the Brukenthal National Museum (Sibiu, Romania); the Royal Museum of Fine Arts Antwerp (Antwerp, Belgium) and in the National Gallery (London, England), respectively.

The Sibiu Crucifixion[edit]

An early work appearing to be influenced by the Flemish school, the Sibiu Crucifixion was formerly attributed to an unknown 14th century German painter. A symbolic view of Messina is depicted in the background, probably an allusion to Jerusalem as requested by the unknown client, in a typical fashion of the time.

The Antwerp Crucifixion
ArtistAntonello da Messina
Year1475
TypeOil on wood
Dimensions59.7 cm × 42.5 cm (23.5 in × 16.7 in)
LocationRoyal Museum of Fine Arts of Antwerp
Antwerp, Belgium

The Antwerp Crucifixion[edit]

The Antwerp Crucifixion represents Christ crucified between two evil-doers, with Mary and John the Evangelist seated on the ground. The work shows a landscape typical of the Flemish school in the lower part; the well devised spatial disposition of the crosses in the upper half demonstrates a full knowledge of the innovative method of perspective known to Italian art of the period. The Italian scholar Roberto Longhi asserted that the upper part was added several years later. At the bottom left the painter wrote his name on a scroll and the date: 1475.

The London Crucifixion
ArtistAntonello da Messina
Year1475
TypeOil on wood
Dimensions42 cm × 25.5 cm (17 in × 10.0 in)
LocationNational Gallery
London, England

The London Crucifixion[edit]

Belonging to a later phase, the London Crucifixion is one of the few paintings signed and dated by Antonello: "1475/antonellus messaneus/me pinxit". The geometrical composition is divided in two parts by the cross and the lake in the background, with the Virgin on the left and St. John on the right.

Further reading[edit]

  • Barbera, K, ed. (2005). Antonello da Messina : Sicily's Renaissance master. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art.