Lamentation (School of Lucas Cranach the Elder)
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| Lamentation over the Dead Body of Christ (Lamentation) | |
|---|---|
| Polish: Opłakiwanie Chrystusa, German: Beweinung des vom Kreuz abgenommenen Christus | |
| Artist | School of the Lucas Cranach the Elder |
| Year | 1538 |
| Medium | Oil on wood panel |
| Movement | German Renaissance |
| Subject | Lamentation of Christ |
| Dimensions | 156 cm × 131.5 cm (61 in × 51.8 in) |
| Location | Muzeum Narodowe, Wrocław (National Museum, Wrocław) |
Lamentation over the Dead Body of Christ (known as Lamentation) is an oil painting on wood panel completed by a follower of the German Renaissance artist Lucas Cranach the Elder during the 1530s. It is considered to be among the most valued works of art to have been plundered from Polish collections during World War II.[1][2]
The painting, which had been in the collection of the Schlesische Museum der Bildenden Künste in Breslau (now National Museum, Wrocław) since 1880, was evacuated in the aftermath of Siege of Breslau in November 1945 and had gone missing by 1946.[2] It 1970, Lamentation entered the collection of the Nationalmuseum in Stockholm. Following a years-long investigation by the Polish government, the painting was officially restituted to the National Museum in Wrocław in 2022.[1]
Cranach the Elder (1472–1553) was a leading German Renaissance artists who served as court painter to John Frederick I, Elector of Saxony in Wittenberg around the time Lamentation was completed.[3] Similarly to other Renaissance artists, he maintained a robust workshop. In addition to numerous apprentices, Cranach's workshop in Wittenberg also employed his sons Hans and Lucas Cranach the Younger.[3] Over four hundred paintings are said to have been completed by Cranach and his studio, and distinguishing exact authorship has oftentimes proven difficult.[3] A friend of Martin Luther, Cranach was a major supporter of the Protestant Reformation.[4]