The Raising of Lazarus

Minneapolis Institute of Art

The Raising of Lazarus

Studio of Jacopo Tintoretto

Date
late 1570 or 1580s
Medium
Oil on canvas
Department
European Art
Institution
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Jacopo Tintoretto ran a busy workshop in Venice, specializing in dramatic, complex religious paintings, which he produced at incredible speed. This crowded composition, with its daring foreshortening and elongated figures, is consistent with Tintoretto’s style. However, the overall quality of the execution suggests the work is by studio assistants rather than the master himself. The subject is the biblical story of Jesus raising Lazarus from the dead. A throng looks on as Lazarus, four days dead, emerges from his stone coffin. Lazarus became a protector saint of the sick, especially victims of the plague, and he was popular in Venice. This picture might be associated with the plague outbreak of 1576, which killed some 50, 000 Venetians, one-third of the city’s population. Italy, Europe

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