The "Taking of Christ" was painted by Caravaggio.
Baroque art from Italy and Spain is similar in that artworks from both regions emphasize realism. Genre scenes (scenes of everyday life) grew in popularity during this time; two well-known examples of this are The Beaneater (1580 - 1590) by Italian painter Annibale Carracci and Old Woman Frying Eggs by Spanish painter Diego Velazquez (1618). Before the Baroque period, these types of subjects were not considered by most to be worthy of being represented in paint. Paintings of a religious nature were also often brought down to earth; Christ and the saints were still divine, but they began to be represented as ordinary people that one might pass on the street. The compositions of religious paintings were kept simple in order to stress the meaning of the subject at hand. Examples of this move toward simplicity include Italian painter Caravaggio's Madonna di Loreto (c. 1604 - 1606) and Spanish painter Francisco de Zurbaran's Saint Serapion (1628).
baroque
The Crucifixion is one of the most cherished subjects in Christian art. It has been painted by practically every painter in the 12th - 16th centuries. Also later by many artists. Picasso did, for instance. So there are hundreds and hundreds of Crucifixion paintings. I believe Rembrandt did also!
The painter is James Ensor.
he Last Judgment (Italian: Il Giudizio Universale) is a fresco by the Italian Renaissance painter Michelangelo covering the whole altar wall of the Sistine Chapel in Vatican City. It is a depiction of the Second Coming of Christ and the final and eternal judgment by God of all humanity.
Giovanni
Warner Sallman painted this picture in 1942.
in the year 1475
Piero della Francesca
Salvador Dali - the title is Christ of Saint John of the Cross.
In Italian, it is Gesù (JeZOOOO).
The 'Baptism of Christ'.