The Entombment is a glue-size painting on linen attributed to the Early Netherlandish painter Dieric Bouts. It shows a scene from the biblical entombment of Christ, and was probably completed between 1440 and 1455 as a wing panel for a large hinged polyptych altarpiece. The painting is an austere but affecting portrayal of sorrow and grief.
About The Entombment (Bouts) in brief

She is supported by John the Evangelist, who wears a red robe. Mary of Clopas is behind them, holding a red cloth over her mouth, while the Magdalen is in the foreground at Christ’s feet, dressed in a heavily folded cloak. The cloth is tightly woven with 20 to 22 vertical and between 19 and 22 horizontal threads per centimetre. The canvas is covered by accumulated layers of grey dirt and cannot be cleaned without damaging the surface and removing large amounts of pigment. A strip at the top has been less affected than the rest because it was protected by a frame. It would, however, always have appeared as less intense and brilliant than those of comparable oil or tempera paintings on panel. A more finely woven linen mounted on a wooden stretcher was first mounted on the border – now visible on the lower border – which was used as a guide to cut the picture down before framing. Glue-size consists of creating a distemperments by mixing in pigments and then mixing in water and then using a binder derived from boiled animal skin and other tissues as a base. The image is saturated in turn to its frame, often leaving an image on the reverse side, which was often left on the side of the linen lined with an image which was then lined with a temporary stretcher and cut down to cut down the picture. The Entombments is painted on linen tightly woven.
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This page is based on the article The Entombment (Bouts) published in Wikipedia (as of Nov. 03, 2020) and was automatically summarized using artificial intelligence.






