Christ on the Cross Adored by Two Donors explained

Christ on the Cross Adored by Two Donors
Artist:El Greco
Year:c.1590
Medium:oil on canvas
Height Metric:260
Width Metric:171
Museum:Louvre
City:Paris

Christ on the Cross Adored by Two Donors is a c.1590 oil on canvas painting by El Greco, now in the Louvre, Paris.[1]

Intended for a chapel in the Hieronymite monastery in Toledo, it was commissioned by one of the two figures shown beneath Jesus crucified, in the places usually occupied by the Virgin Mary and St John the Evangelist. These had previously been identified as the Covarrubias brothers, sons of the architect Alonso de Covarrubias, but now they are believed to be Dionisio Melgar on the left and an unknown inhabitant of Toledo (possibly Blas de Fuentechada or Pablo Rodríguez de Belalcázar) on the right.[2] Melgar was a canon of the aforementioned monastery and may have been one of the commissioners. It was still in the monastery in 1715, but was acquired by Louis Philippe of France in the 19th century. It appeared in the 1908 autumn salon in Paris, where it was acquired by its present owners.

See also

References

  1. Web site: Le Christ en croix adoré par deux donateurs. 1590.
  2. Web site: El Greco. Spanish.