spinner-caricamento
Share
fullscreen
Michelangelo Merisi, detto Caravaggio - Behold the man
fullscreen
Antonio Canova - Penitent Magdalene
fullscreen
Peter Paul Rubens - Venus and Mars
fullscreen
Filippo Lippi - Saints Sebastian, John the Baptist and Francis
fullscreen
Paolo Caliari, detto il Veronese - Susanna and the Elders
fullscreen
Alessandro Magnasco, detto Lissandrino - Entertainment in a garden of Albaro
fullscreen
Luca Cambiaso - Self-portrait of the painter in the act of painting the portrait of his father
fullscreen
Domenico Piola - Cain and Abel
fullscreen
Luca Cambiaso - Madonna of the candle
fullscreen
Valerio Castello - Madonna of the veil
fullscreen
Jan Wildens - Landscape with tree-lined avenue
fullscreen
Hans Memling - Sorrowful Christ in the act of blessing
fullscreen
Jan Roos - Still life of fruit, vegetables and flowers
fullscreen
Francesco de Zurbaran - Sant’Orsola
fullscreen
Orazio De Ferrari - Christ and the adulteress
fullscreen
Antonio Travi, detto il Sestri - Adoration of the shepherds
Michelangelo Merisi, detto Caravaggio - Behold the man
Antonio Canova - Penitent Magdalene
Peter Paul Rubens - Venus and Mars
Filippo Lippi - Saints Sebastian, John the Baptist and Francis
Paolo Caliari, detto il Veronese - Susanna and the Elders
Alessandro Magnasco, detto Lissandrino - Entertainment in a garden of Albaro
Luca Cambiaso - Self-portrait of the painter in the act of painting the portrait of his father
Domenico Piola - Cain and Abel
Luca Cambiaso - Madonna of the candle
Valerio Castello - Madonna of the veil
Jan Wildens - Landscape with tree-lined avenue
Hans Memling - Sorrowful Christ in the act of blessing
Jan Roos - Still life of fruit, vegetables and flowers
Francesco de Zurbaran - Sant’Orsola
Orazio De Ferrari - Christ and the adulteress
Antonio Travi, detto il Sestri - Adoration of the shepherds

Other works on display

Description

The canvas, the origin of which is still unknown, was registered in 1921 in the inventory of Palazzo Bianco as a copy of Lionello Spada da Caravaggio. In 1953 it was identified by Caterina Marcenaro and, the following year, it was published by Roberto Longhi as the autographed version of the Lombard master from which derivative copies were drawn, especially from the Sicilian area. Various hypotheses have been formulated relating to the commission and the ancient provenance of this painting, but there are still no certain elements that allow us to reconstruct the events of the work until its "discovery" in the Genoese deposits. One of the most accredited hypotheses linked the Ecce Homo of Palazzo Bianco with the work that Caravaggio himself, in an autographed writing dated June 1605, promised to the Roman nobleman Massimo Massimi, a prominent figure in counter-reformed Rome; other studies, on the other hand, have proposed identifying this canvas with the one already in the Genoese collection of Pietro Gentile; with the one mentioned in the will of the Genoese citizen Lanfranco Massa, drawn up in Naples in 1630, or with the one that appears meticulously described in the inventory of the Neapolitan collection of the Spanish Juan de Lezcano (in 1631). Beyond the various hypotheses, therefore, the only incontrovertible fact can be seen in the numerous "repentances", visible in the hands of Pilate, in the shoulders, in the hands and in the loincloth of Christ that prove the speed of execution of the work. However, the painting should have arrived in Genoa early. To reinforce this last possibility, there is no doubt that precise formal references to Caravaggio's composition are found in works by artists active in Genoa already in the early decades of the seventeenth century, such as Strozzi, Borzone, Orazio De Ferrari and Van Dyck, who immediately captured the innovative characters of the lighting choices. As in Caravaggio, in fact, also in this painting - in which echoes of the painter's Lombard training are evident - lights and shadows are charged with symbolic meanings so that in the luminous light of the body of Christ, depicted in the resigned attitude of the Agnus Dei, the black of Pilate's dress contrasts with it, which strengthens, even visually, the negative role of the Roman procurator as judge. The eloquent gesture of the latter's hands, then, inviting the spectators to enter the scene depicted beyond the parapet, gives the episode the characteristics of a figurative "sacred drama".

Discounts and prices’ reductions with the Artsupp Card

With the Artsupp Card you can get, for the first time, discounts and reduced entrance tickets for Italian museums .

Discover more

Other artworks in Genova

What you can find on Artsupp

Artsupp is the museums’ portal through which it’s easy to discover art, exhibitions and artworks. Now museums in France, the UK, the Netherlands, Germany and Spain can also share their activities with users

About us