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Crucifixion
Jost Haller·1445
Historical Context
Jost Haller created this work around 1445, now in the Unterlinden Museum. The Crucifixion was among the most theologically important subjects in Christian art, requiring painters to balance doctrinal accuracy with emotional power. The Early Renaissance period saw significant artistic innovation across Europe, with painters developing new techniques for representing the visible world with unprecedented naturalism and spatial coherence.
Technical Analysis
The painter balances doctrinal accuracy in the depiction of Christ's wounds and suffering with compositional elegance, using the vertical cross to organize the surrounding figures into a coherent devotional image.
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