Matthias Grünewald
Mathias Grünewald (c. 1470 in Würzburg, died 31 August 1528) was a German painter and artist. Today he is seen as one of the important German artists of the Renaissance. His real name was Mathias Gothart or Mathias Neidhardt, his first name is also spelled Mathis. Sometimes he is called Mathias of Aschaffenburg. Today, only ten paintings and 35 drawings survive. At first many of his works were attributed to Albrecht Dürer, even though Dürer's style of paining is completely different. All the surviving works have religious motifs.
Matthias Grünewald Media
Grünewald's John the Evangelist. This work was long thought to be a self-portrait.
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Second state of the Isenheim Altarpiece, Colmar, Unterlinden Museum
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Sketch for a lost Saint Dorothy (Berlin). The J. Paul Getty Museum purchased a forged painting based on this drawing.
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Grünewald in a 19th-century depiction on the Frankoniabrunnen, by Ferdinand von Miller (1824), now in front of the Würzburg Residence
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The Stuppach Madonna, 1514–1519.
The Mocking of Christ, c. 1503
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Crucifixion in the Kunstmuseum Basel.