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In Agony in the Garden, Jesus prays in the garden after the Last Supper while the disciples sleep and Judas leads the mob, by Andrea Mantegna c. 1460.. In Roman Catholic tradition, the Agony in the Garden is the first Sorrowful Mystery of the Rosary [8] and the First Station of the Scriptural Way of the Cross (second station in the Philippine version).
The Agony in the Garden is a painting of 1455–1456 by the Italian artist Andrea Mantegna [1] in the National Gallery, London. The painting shows Christ (at the centre) praying before a group of cherubs (at upper left) who are holding instruments of the Passion .
Agony in the Garden is an egg tempera painting on wood panel, most likely painted on poplar, as is common of Bellini's wood panel works. [3] Bellini coated the wood panel with a gesso ground and provided an intricate underdrawing applied with a liquid medium, which provide the painting with a great complexity in texture especially seen in the ...
The Agony in the Garden is a small painting by William Blake, completed as part of his 1799–1800 series of Bible illustrations commissioned by his patron and friend Thomas Butts. The work illustrates a passage from the Gospel of Luke which describes Christ's turmoil in the Garden of Gethsemane before his arrest and Crucifixion following Judas ...
Agony in the Garden is a 1590 oil on canvas painting by El Greco or his studio, dating to his second stay in Toledo and still showing the major influence of Titian on his work. It is now on display in the Toledo Art Museum in Toledo, Ohio. An angel appears to Christ in the left foreground, holding a chalice in his hand.
Christ is portrayed in center of the panel above a clear sky, kneeling in the Garden of Gethsemane and receiving by an angel a divine chalice. His figure forms a triangle with the three sleeping apostles at the bottom (from the left, John, Peter and James); the triangle is connected to the painting's sides by the symmetrical line of the hills.
The image of the Crucifixion is at the Louvre Museum in Paris, while the scenes of the Resurrection and Agony in the Garden are in Tours at the Musée des Beaux-Arts. [4] Despite being smaller components of this altarpiece, these paintings display Mantegna's attention to detail and precision as an artist in his quest to render a memorable and ...
The surviving complete sculptures of the Agony in the Garden include figures of the kneeling Christ and the Apostle St. James, or an angel with a cup of bitterness. Late Gothic stone sculptures of the Agony in the Garden are in the Church of St. Moritz in Olomouc, [6] the Church of St. James in Jihlava [7] and Modřice near Brno. [8]