Loading...
L'Agonie au Jardin des Oliviers (Bartsch 54), GDUT4099

Wikimedia Commons · CC0 · Hover to magnify, click for fullscreen

Original file
PrintCC0

L'Agonie au Jardin des Oliviers (Bartsch 54), GDUT4099

Albrecht Dürer

1508
Engraving

About This Work

Christ is shown prostrate on the ground in a state of spiritual anguish, while an angel descends from a cloud holding a large wooden cross. Below him, the disciples Peter, James, and John are asleep, unaware of the impending arrival of Judas and the soldiers visible near the gate in the background. The landscape is defined by rugged rocks and a distant fence, emphasizing Christ's isolation in his final hours of freedom.

This work belongs to Dürer's influential Small Passion series, which focused on the human and emotional experience of the 'Imitatio Christi' (Imitation of Christ). Dürer's technical innovations in printmaking provided the visual vocabulary for later Northern European esoteric artists who often used Passion imagery as an allegory for the spiritual 'Great Work' and internal transformation.

Jesus ChristSaint PeterSaint JamesSaint JohnAngelcross73D31273D31311G182

Inscriptions

AD

Connected Texts

Thomas à Kempis

Dürer's Passion series is the visual culmination of the 'Imitatio Christi' movement popularized by Kempis, emphasizing personal spiritual identification with Christ's suffering.

Provenance & Source

Object

Medium

Engraving

GenreAI

religious

Digital Source

Source

Wikimedia Commons · CC0

Credit

https://www.parismuseescollections.paris.fr/fr/petit-palais/oeuvres/l-agonie-au-jardin-des-oliviers-bartsch-54#infos-principales

Usage Terms

Creative Commons Zero, Public Domain Dedication

Original Resolution

4652 × 5880 px

SHA-1

40154b9e7aef3eb6870c25bf9ad2e0a53604c4c5

Upload Date

August 11, 2023

Harvested

March 24, 2026

Linked Data

AI AI-cataloged fields generated by gemini-3-flash-preview on April 1, 2026. Getty identifiers are AI-inferred and may require verification.

View full resolution (4652 × 5880)

This library is built in the open.

If you spot an error, have a suggestion, or just want to say hello — we’d love to hear from you.