There are many paintings of Christ, but of course none of them were done during his life and so are merely artistic representations of Him. Many are probably highly inaccurate, as He is portrayed as very westernized.
Piss-Christ
The baptism of Christ
The suffering of Christ
The suffering of Christ
The suffering of Christ
The Burial of the Count of Orgaz and El espolio (The Disrobing of Christ).
The Spanish painter "El Mudo" is known for many of his paintings. Some of his most famous paintings include "Nativity," "Baptism of Christ," and "Abraham Receiving the Three Angels."
I think you mean Lamentation. The Lamentation of Christ was common in art in the Middle Ages, it was usually paintings showing the Blessed Virgin Mary and the Apostles mourning over the Body of Christ after it was taken down from the cross.
Jesus was ethnically semitic (Hebrew). This means his physical appearance was the same as every other ethnically Aramaic person: olive complected with dark, straight hair. There are no actual paintings of the actual Christ. The paintings that exist are artists renditions of how the individual artist believes Christ would have looked.
One is Angelic Landscape, the second is The Trinity. Not sure of the one with Christ on the Cross.
All paintings, statues and icons purporting to be likenesses of Yashua Messiah are blasphemous and idolatrous - no one knows what He looked like.
AnswerIn the popular paintings of this religious event, Jesus Christ is in the middle amongst 11 disciples. In actuality, Judas was not present after betraying Jesus, so two figures at the table would have had to share the middle spot since there were exactly 12 figures on that night in history.