The Twelve-Year-Old Jesus in the Temple

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Year1879
MediumOil on canvas
The Twelve-Year-Old Jesus in the Temple
ArtistMax Liebermann
Year1879
MediumOil on canvas
MovementRealism
Dimensions149.6 cm × 130.8 cm (58.9 in × 51.5 in)
LocationHamburger Kunsthalle, Hamburg

The Twelve-Year-Old Jesus in the Temple is an oil-on-canvas painting by German painter Max Liebermann, created in 1879. It is held at the Hamburger Kunsthalle.[1]

The episode of the twelve-year-old Jesus in the temple is taken from the Gospel of Luke (Lk 2.42-50), and is often depicted in Christian art, for example in cycles on the life of Mary.

Liebermann had the idea for this painting when he visited the Jewish quarter of Amsterdam in 1876. Liebermann was following in the footsteps of Rembrandt, so to speak.[2] He made the first architectural sketches of the Portuguese synagogue while there. In 1878 further studies were made in the Sephardic Synagogue, in Venice; Liebermann took the curved staircase from here, which would be later implemented as a spiral staircase in the painting.[3]

Both Rembrandt's depiction of the subject in two etchings and a painting by Matthias Stom, then attributed to Gerrit van Honthorst, which he probably saw in the Alte Pinakothek, in Munich, influenced Liebermann's design of the group of figures. The lighting, on the other hand, was influenced by Giambattista Tiepolo.

The Dutch Caravaggist Matthias Stom had the idea of putting Jesus and the scribes on an equal footing by depicting the child standing and his adult interlocutors sitting (c.1640/45); Liebermann followed this influence.

At the end of 1878, Liebermann settled in Munich and began his individual studies of the figures, the arrangement of which more or less corresponded to the later painting. According to his own statements, he found his models in Munich hospitals.

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