{{selectedLanguage.Name}}
Sign In Sign out
×

Hussite Sermon

Karl Lessing

Hussite Sermon

Karl Lessing
  • Date: 1836
  • Style: Romanticism
  • Genre: history painting
  • Media: oil
  • Dimensions: 223 x 293 cm
  • Order Karl Lessing Oil Painting Reproduction
    Order Oil Painting
    reproduction

The Hussite Sermon (German - Die Hussitenpredigt) is a painting by the Düsseldorf-based painter Carl Friedrich Lessing, showing an open-air sermon being delivered by a Hussite preacher in the 15th century. It is now in the Alte Nationalgalerie in Berlin.


In 1834 Crown Prince Frederick William of Prussia saw an oil sketch on the subject by Lessing in 1834 and commissioned him between 1835 and 1836 to produce a full-scale version. The mainly-Catholic Rhineland had recently been annexed to the Protestant-dominated Kingdom of Prussia by the Congress of Vienna and so the work was seen as a piece of anti-Catholic propaganda for the area's Protestant minority. In the context of the Restoration of the German princes to their thrones and the Vormärz, others also saw it as a criticism of the repressiveness of the states and systems put in place by Metternich and the Congress. Middle-class audiences saw it as an expression of opposition to kingly and church authority alike. It was briefly exhibited in Germany and Paris, spreading the reputation of the Düsseldorf school of painting.



This is a part of the Wikipedia article used under the Creative Commons Attribution-Sharealike 3.0 Unported License (CC-BY-SA). The full text of the article is here →


More ...
Tags:
Mythology
  • Tag is correct
  • Tag is incorrect
Prophet
  • Tag is correct
  • Tag is incorrect

Court Métrage

Short Films