Page:Cyclopedia of Painters and Paintings, 1887, vol 1.djvu/362

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CHRIST lery, Rome, where it was attributed to Leo- nardo da Vinci. Probably by Bernardino Luini. Waageu, Treasures, i. 319. Subject treated also by Giovacchino As- sereto, Liverpool Gallery; Bernardino Luini, National Gallery, London, Church at Saron- no (fresco) ; Lodovico Mazzolino, Palazzo Christ and Evangelists, Fra Bartolommeo, Palazzo Pitti, Florence. Borghese, Rome, Berlin Museum ; Leonard Bramer, Brunswick Gallery; Charles Adolphe [ Bonnegrace, Toulon Museum ; Pinturicchio, S. M. Maggiore (fresco), Spello ; Rembrandt, Munich Gallery ; Gaudenzio Ferrari, S. M. delle Grazie, Milan ; Ernest Zimmerman, (1879). CHRIST AND THE ELEMENTS, Carlo ! Dohi, Dresden Gallery ; canvas, H. 2 ft. 11 in. x 2 ft. 5 in. Christ, half length, bless- ing the bread and wine. From Casa Rurnieri, Venice. Copy in Louvre by Agnese Dolci. Engraved by F. Basan. Gal. Roy. de Dresde, i. PI. 41. CHRIST AT EMMAUS. See Supper at Emmaus. CHRIST, ENTOMB- MENT OF. See Entomb- ment. CHRIST, ENTRY INTO JERUSALEM OF, Johann Friedrich Overbeck, Ma- rieii Kirche, Lubeck ; can- vas, H. 6 ft. x 8 ft; signed, dated 1824 Christ, riding an ass, with his right hand raised in benediction, is passing through the gates attended by a numerous concourse of people men, women, and children bearing palms and sing- ing ; in foreground a man spreads his garment before the ass. Begun in Vienna in 1809, finished in Rome in 1824. Atkinson, 16. Subject treated also by Giotto, Arena, Padua ; Vassilacchi, Church of Be- nedictines, Perugia ; Giov. Ant. Fassolo, Dresden Gal- lery ; Pasignano, Pal. Cap- poni, Florence ; Sebastian del Piombo ; Nicolas Pous- sin ; Charles Lebrun, Louvre ; Charles Miiller (Salon, 1844) ; Edouard Dubufe, (Salon, 1845); J. F. Bremond, Church of La Villette, Paris ; Hippolyte Flandrin, St. Germain des Pres, Paris. CHRIST AND EVANGELISTS, Fra Bar- tolommeo, Palazzo Pitti, Florence ; wood, tranferred to canvas, H. 9 ft. 2 in. x 6 ft. 6 in.; signed, dated 1516. The Saviour, partly draped, standing on a pedestal in front of a niche, holds the sceptre in his left hand