1543, Titian (Tiziano Vecellio), Ecco Homo -- Kunsthistorisches Museum (Vienna)
From the museum label: The scene was rarely depicted in Italy but can probably be explained by the Flemish origins of the man who commissioned it. The figure of Christ though conspicuously moved to the side still attracts all our attention due to the picture's brilliant composition. The excited young man to the left acts as the compositional introduction while the view of the soldier's back leads our gaze up to the protagonist. The double eagle and the signature "EQUES CES" further to the right are the artist's homage to the imperial court whose official painter Titian had become in 1533.
1543, Titian (Tiziano Vecellio), Ecco Homo -- Kunsthistorisches Museum (Vienna)
From the museum label: The scene was rarely depicted in Italy but can probably be explained by the Flemish origins of the man who commissioned it. The figure of Christ though conspicuously moved to the side still attracts all our attention due to the picture's brilliant composition. The excited young man to the left acts as the compositional introduction while the view of the soldier's back leads our gaze up to the protagonist. The double eagle and the signature "EQUES CES" further to the right are the artist's homage to the imperial court whose official painter Titian had become in 1533.