Friday, December 5, 2025

Compositions with Ordeals

Albrecht Dürer
Head of Suffering Man
1503
drawing
British Museum


Joos van Cleve
Death of the Virgin
ca. 1515-23
oil on panel
Alte Pinakothek, Munich

attributed to Guadenzio Ferrari
The Road to Calvary
ca. 1535
drawing
British Museum

Domenico Campagnola
Death of St Peter Martyr
before 1564
drawing
British Museum

Cornelis Cort after Giulio Clovio
The Crucifixion
1568
hand-colored engraving printed on silk
British Museum

Denys Calvaert
Christ at the Column
ca. 1578-80
oil on panel
Clark Art Institute, Williamstown, Massachusetts

Luca Cambiaso
The Road to Calvary
before 1585
drawing
British Museum

Pietro Faccini
Study for the Entombment
ca. 1580-1600
drawing
Graphische Sammlung Albertina, Vienna

attributed to Giovanni Benedetto Castiglione (il Grechetto)
The Crucifixion, as overseen by God the Father
ca. 1650-70
oil on paper
British Museum

Bertholet Flémal
Martyrdom of St Catherine of Alexandria
before 1675
oil on canvas
Musée des Beaux-Arts de Liège

Sigismondo Caula
The Expulsion from Paradise
ca. 1690
drawing
British Museum

Michelangelo Cerruti
Crucifixion of St Peter
ca. 1695
drawing
Graphische Sammlung Albertina, Vienna

Gaspare Diziani
Apollo and Marsyas
before 1767
drawing
British Museum

Giovanni Battista Cipriani
Ixion chained to the Wheel
ca. 1779
drawing
British Museum

Jacobus Buys
The Stoning of Stephen
1795
watercolor on paper
British Museum

attributed to Vincenzo Camuccini
Classical Banquet with Dying Man
before 1844
drawing
British Museum

Currier & Ives after Daniele da Volterra
The Descent from the Cross
1856
lithograph
Blanton Museum of Art, Austin, Texas

An Occasional Imitation of a Modern Author Upon the Game of Chess

A tablet stood of that abstersive tree
Where Æthiop's swarthy Bird did build her nest,
Inlaid it was with Lybian ivory
Drawn from the jaws of Africk's prudent beast.

Two kings like Saul, much taller than the rest,
Their equal armies draw into the field;
Till one take th' other prisoner they contest:
Courage and fortune must to conduct yield. 

This game the Persian magi did invent,
The force of Eastern wisdom to express;
From thence to busy Europeans sent,
And styled by modern Lombards pensive Chess.

Yet some that fled from Troy to Rome report
Penthesilea Priam did oblige;
Her Amazons, his Trojans taught this sport,
To pass the tedious hours of ten years' siege. 

There she presents herself, whilst King and Peers
Look gravely on whilst fierce Bellona fights;
Yet maiden modesty her motions steers,
Nor rudely skips o're Bishop's heads like Knights. 

– Sir John Denham (1642)