Not currently on view
In the collection of Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · as of July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
This narrow panel was probably part of a predella, the supporting lower portion of an altarpiece, which no doubt featured other scenes from the Passion of Christ. It is most likely an early work by Hans Maler, who worked in Ulm in southwestern Germany before settling in the Tyrol. He is now known chiefly for portraits painted in the later part of his career for members of the imperial family and other prominent sitters. His earlier religious paintings are a variant on the expressive, patterned style and vivid characterization of an accomplished group of painters working in Ulm and nearby Memmingen, notably Bartholomäus Zeitblom and Bernhard Strigel.
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Quinten Massijs (I) — Christ Carrying the Cross
Master of the Freising Visitation — Christ Carrying the Cros
Jan Gossart (called Mabuse) — Christ Carrying the Cross
Master of the Worcester Carrying of the Cross — Christ Carry
Martin Schongauer — Christ Carrying the Cross
Master of the Schlägl Altarpiece (German) — Altarpiece with
Master of the Berswordt Altar — The Flagellation
North Netherlandish (Bruges) Painer — Christ Bearing the Cro
anonymous — Crucifixion with Saints Cosmas and Damian
Lucas Cranach the Elder — The Crucifixion
Master of the Schlägl Altarpiece (German) — Altarpiece with
Martin Schongauer (German, c. 1450–1491) — The Passion: Chri