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The Vienna Diptych or the Fall and Redemption of Man[1] is a religious diptych by the Flemish artist Hugo van der Goes depicting the fall of man on the left panel and the lamentation of Christ on the right panel. Painted in the second half of the 15th century, the diptych is housed in the Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna. [1]
Hugo van der Goes (c. 1430/1440 – 1482) was one of the most significant and original Early Netherlandish painters of the late 15th century. Van der Goes was an important painter of altarpieces as well as portraits.
The delicate and sharply contoured bodies of the first two human beings are quite different from the figures in the Lamentation, which are interpreted in a painterly fashion and set restlessly...
Diptych with the Fall of Man and Salvation: Fall of Man. around 1470/75, Artist: Hugo van der Goes
The Fall. 1467-68. Oil on oak, 33,8 x 23 cm. Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna. This painting is the left panel of a diptych, the right panel showing the Lamentation of Christ. The diptych is one the early works of Goes reflecting the influence of Jan van Eyck.
Page of The Fall by GOES, Hugo van der in the Web Gallery of Art, a searchable image collection and database of European painting, sculpture and architecture (200-1900)
nach 1479, Artist: Hugo van der Goes. Diptychon mit Sündenfall und Erlösung. To the left in the far-off landscape of paradise, the Fall of Man is depicted, to the right the Lamentation of Christ in front of the bare hill where Jesus was crucified.