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Over 60 Fine Art and Pop Culture Interpretations of Da Vinci's The Last Supper.




Okay, so technically The Last Supper was held on the Thursday before Good Friday. But today, for Easter, I'm reposting (with some updates) three of my favorite posts which, together, give you a background on Leonardo da Vinci's famous painting and show an immense collection of various fine art, pop culture and photographic interpretations of it.

The Last Supper. And the one after that. And after that. And then, even more. (2008-2012)


above: The Sopranos Last Supper for Vanity Fair magazine

Whenever I see popular blog posts and online articles about something in pop culture that references something historical, I always wonder if the ... ahem, younger generations know the origin of the original and how many other interpretations had been created prior to the one they tweeted, tagged, posted on 'digg' or shared on Facebook.

Such is the case with a link someone sent me of fun parodies based on Leonardo da Vinci's The Last Supper. I'd seen the Soprano's Last Supper photo in Vanity Fair and was familiar with the Legos one, since it had been e-mailed to me a ways back. Along with those, the link included just about every pop culture version you could think of - from the Simpsons to Star Wars.


Above: The Last Supper made of Lego minifigs

This got me wondering if the people viewing it were aware that The Last Supper was a subject for many well known artists from the 14th-20th centuries, not just da Vinci. From Albrecht Durer to Rembrandt, Tintoretto to Blake, the subject was interpreted by almost every painter who painted for money for centuries. Common sense would tell you that, given that biblical scenes and stories dominated the art world long before any other subjects. But I wondered how many people e-mailing that very link also know that the piece has since been interpreted by the likes of such artists as Salvador Dali, Andy Warhol, Damien Hirst and even photographer David LaChapelle, to name a few. Well, if they didn't, you can e-mail them this post.

Instead of parodies in this post, I wanted to show you other fine art and photographer's interpretations of Leonardo da Vinci's famous painting. Don't groan... you may just learn something.

You are probably used to seeing the original like the one below:

But that is very enhanced for reproductions like posters, etc. To be more accurate, see the next two images (and click on them to enlarge)

Let's start with the original:

Above: before cleaning

Above: after cleaning

Facts:
The subject: The Last Supper
Painted by: Leonardo da Vinci
Where: Milan, refectory of the Santa Maria delle Grazie convent
When: From 1494 to 1498
Size: 460 x 880 cm (181 x 346 in)
Technique: Tempera with oils on white lead and calcium carbonate


A site where you can see the Leonardo DaVinci's Last Supper in amazing detail, down to a pixel.

Wanna see it in person? booking info here.

And now some wonderful fine art interpretations of the Last Supper, in chronological order:


Above: Marisol Escobar's Last Supper (1930) installation


Above: Salvador Dali's The Sacrament Of The Last Supper, 1955


Above: Mary Beth Edelson's feminist interpretation, 1971


Above: Hermann Nitsch's Last Supper (1976-9)


Above: Andy Warhol's Last Supper (pink), 1986


Above: Andy Warhol's Last Supper (Dove), 1986

above: Andy Warhol, Last Supper, 1986


above: Aubrey Hallis, The Last Breakfast, 1996


Above: Damien Hirst's "Last Supper", 1999


Above: two of the 13 screenprints from Damien Hirst's "The Last Supper" collection, 1999




Above: Devorah Sperber's unusual installation, After The Last Supper, 2005




Above: Francine LeClercq's impressive Last Supper Untitled (installation), 2007


Above: Ron English's Last Supper Icons, 2011


above: The Last Supper by Etch-A-Sketch artist Kevin E.Davis.

Now, some photographic interpretations of the The Last Supper for both advertising campaigns and personal collections:


Above: by photographer Marcos López, 2001


Above: by photographer Cui Xiuwen, 2003


Above: by Russian film director, Mamedov


Above: by photographer David LaChapelle


Above: unknown photographer, an ad for the Folsom Street Fair


Above: controversial recreation by photographer Elisabth Ohlsen Watson


Above: Fashion shot by Frank Herholdt


Above: unknown photographer, ad for Francois Girbaud


Above: Soprano's Last Supper shot by Annie Liebovitz for Vanity Fair & HBO

Okay, now I know you're dying to see all the parodies, so here are some links to those:

*An enormous collection of pop culture and television interpretations of the Last Supper from the Slog, posted by Dan Savage


And yet another collection, Suddenly Last Supper, of photoshopped, staged and fun pop culture versions from The Sopranos to Legos of The Last Supper can be found here.

For real art history buffs, here are links to just a few of the other historical religious paintings of the last supper:

Last Supper
Lord's Supper, German Gothic Sculptor, c 1250. Web Gallery of Art.

Last Supper/Communion of the Apostles, Liturgical Veil, 13th/14th century. Benaki Museum, Athens.

Last Supper, Wissington, Suffolk, 13th century. Medieval Wall Painting in the English Parish Church.
The Last Supper and the Agony in the Garden, Spolto, c 1300. Worcester Art Museum.
Last Supper, Fairstead, Essex, 13??. Medieval Wall Painting in the English Parish Church.

Scenes from the Life of Christ: 13. Last Supper, Giotto di Bondone, 1304-1306.
The Last Supper, Duccio di Buoninsegna, 1308-1311. CGFA.

The Last Supper, Friskney, Lincs, c 1320. Medieval Wall Painting in the English Parish Church.

The Last Supper, Pietro Lorenzetti, 1320-1330. Olga's Gallery.

The Last Supper, Jaume Serra, 1370-1400. Web Gallery of Art.

The Last Supper, Little Tey, Essex, 14??. Medieval Wall Painting in the English Parish Church.

The Last Supper, Jaume Huguet, 1450. CGFA.

Communion of the Apostles, Fra Angelico, 1451-53. CGFA.

The Last Supper, Jacopo Bassano, 1542. Galleria Borghese, Rome.

The Last Supper, Dieric Bouts, 1464-67. Web Gallery of Art.

The Last Supper, Taddeo Crivelli, 1469. Getty Museum.

The Last Supper, Jaime Huguet, 1470. Web Gallery of Art.

The Last Supper, Domenico Ghirlandaio, 1476. Web Gallery of Art

The Last Supper, Domenico Ghirlandaio, 1480. Web Gallery of Art

The Last Supper, Domenico Ghirlandaio, c 1486. Web Gallery of Art

The Last Supper, Pietro Perugino, 1493-96. Web Gallery of Art.

The Last Supper, Leonardo daVinci, 1498.

The Last Supper, Bernaert van Orley, 1500's. Metropolitan Museum of Art.

The Last Supper, Little Easton, Essex, 15??. Medieval Wall Painting in the English Parish Church.

Christ Instructing Peter and John to Prepare for the Passover, Vincenzo Civerchio, 1504. National
Gallery of Art.

The Last Supper, Albrecht Dürer, 1510.

The Last Supper, Franciabigio, 1514. Web Gallery of Art.

The Last Supper, Albrecht Dürer, 1523.

The Last Supper, Andrea del Sarto, 1520-25. Web Gallery of Art.

The Last Supper, Albrecht Durer, c 1520. Lutheran Brotherhood's Collection of Religious Art

The Last Supper, Bernart van Orley, 1520-1530. Metropolitan Museum of Art.

The Last Supper, Hans Holbein the Younger, 1524-25. CGFA.

Triptypch with the Last Supper, Jacob Cornelisz van Oostsanen. Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam.

Plaque with the Last Supper, Jean Penicaud I, c 1530. National Gallery of Art.

The Last Supper, Jacopo Bassano, 1542. Borghese Barberini Corsini Spada Gallery, Milan.

The Last Supper, Juan deJuanes, 1560's. Web Gallery of Art.

The Last Supper, Tintoretto, 1592-94. Web Gallery of Art

The Last Supper, Daniele Crespi, 1624-25. Web Gallery of Art.

The Last Supper, Peter Paul Rubens, 1630. Olga's Gallery.

Glorification of the Eucharist, Rubens, 1630. Metropolitan Museum of Art.

The Last Supper, Rembrandt van Rijn, 1634-35. Metropolitan Museum of Art.

The Last Supper, Philippe de Champaigne, 1600's. CGFA.

The Last Supper, Nicolas Poussin, 1640's. Olga's Gallery.

The Last Supper, Gerbrand van den Eeckhout, 1664. Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam.

The Last Supper, Simon Ushakov, 1685. History of Russian Painting.

The Last Supper, Sebastiano Ricci, 1713/1714. National Gallery of Art.

The Last Supper, William Blake, 1799. National Gallery of Art.

The Last Supper, Nikolay Gay, 1863. Olga's Gallery.

The Last Supper, Carl Bloch, 1875, Hope Gallery.


Of course I've left out hundreds, probably more like thousands, of worthy interpretations so forgive me. But now, when you see photoshopped and contemporary versions of The Last Supper, you'll know that the aforementioned artists did it first.

The LOST Supper & Other TV Casts As The Famous Painting (2010)

above: Detail of the LOST Supper, with character John Locke as Jesus

As a huge fan of J.J. Abrams' televsion series LOST as well as having written the above previous post on fine art and photographic recreations of Da Vinci's The Last Supper, I couldn't blog about this fast enough.

Prior to the show's finale, ABC released two photos of the LOST cast posing as "The Lost Supper" in which one was supposed to be able to find clues as to the character's fates in the final season.

Below are the two images:


above: “Lost” stars Zuleikha Robinson (Ilana), Nestor Carbonell (Richard Alpert), Emilie de Ravin (Claire), Naveen Andrews (Sayid), Evangeline Lilly (Kate), Josh Holloway (Sawyer), Terry O’Quinn (Locke), Matthew Fox (Jack), Daniel Dae Kim (Jin), Michael Emerson (Ben), Jorge Garcia (Hurley), Yunjin Kim (Sun), Ken Leung (Miles) and Jeff Fahey (Frank Lapidus).

We all know this is not the first television show to pose their cast as Jesus and his disciples in the famous pose, but did you know about all of these?

Robert Altman for MASH:

and another view:


Northern Exposure:


That 70's show:


Gordon Ramsey Top Chef:


House, M.D.:


Battlestar Galactica:


and of course, The Simpsons:


South Park:


... and The Sopranos:



23 More Interpretations Of The Last Supper. (2011)

In 2008, I wrote a post called "The Last Supper. And the one after that. And after that. And then, even more." in which I introduced you to the most well known Last Supper painting by Leonardo da Vinci as well as many other versions created by famous artists and photographers, like Andy Warhol and David LaChapelle.

Then, in 2010 I shared with you "The LOST Supper & Other TV Casts As The Famous Painting" which featured images from MASH to The Simpsons posed as the famous painting.

Below is a whole new slew to add to the growing collection of Last Supper homages by various photographers and artists.

Sailor Moon Last Supper by Paolo Cellammare:

detail:


The Last Supper by photographer Pablo Marques:

detail:


Underwater Last Supper by photographer Howard Schatz:

detail:


The Last Supper 2004 by photographer Jim Fiscus:


detail:


"One of you will betray me" by photographer Midnight-Digital:

detail:


by photographer Anna Franke:


by photographer Michael Hunter:


Fellini's Pizzarria by photographer Lazaro:


The Last Supper Just The Hands by photographer bananocrate バナノクラテ


A Lesbian Last Supper by arfism:

detail:


iPod Last Supper by Travis (axb500):


Taste The Good Life by Chance:


The Big Lebowski Last Supper:

detail:


The Manischewitz Last Supper (artist unknown):


The Clowns Last Supper by Dark Vomit:


The Last Supper by Misha Art:


The Last Supper sculpture in the desert by the late artist Albert Szukalski, 1984:

and lit at night:


Artist Lidy Jacob's Rabbit's Last Supper:


The Last Snack by Tom Altany:


The Lion Supper:


The Star Wars Last Supper by Eric Deschamp for Giant Magazine:


And lastly, the amazing doodle illustrated Last Supper by Saga Kikeita:

detail of above:

another detail:

all images courtesy of the individual photographs and artists.

Happy Easter!

Easter Eggs Designers Will Dye For.




There are an incredible amount of beautifully created and designed Easter Eggs out there. Nowadays people use everything from temporary tattoo papers, glitter, metallic paints and rub down letters to create eggciting ones. Several even use fabrics, etching, cut-out paper and appliques.

However, here are a few beauties that still use the good ol' dye you can make on your own.

If you've got the patience, you can make the fabulous Pantone dyed Easter Eggs shown at the beginning of this post that Jessica Jones of How About Orange created for 2012.


An homage to CMYK printing, Martha Stewart shows you how to make the beautiful three dot eggs shown above here.

Below are more stunning egg designs with links to tutorials from Martha Stewart:

above: learn how to make the scrambled lines and letter eggs here

above: learn how to make these lovely botanical silhouette dyed eggs here

above: learn how to make the square patterned eggs here

above: learn how to make the leaf and stenciled eggs here

above: learn how to make the stenciled eggs here

And for those of you who don't want to get your hands dirty, you can digitally create Easter eggs with this free Easter Egg Design app for the iPhone

And don't forget about the EggBot!


• Be sure to check out these 30 inspiring Easter Egg designs at Inspiration Feed

Eight Pancake Portraits From Snooki To The GOS and A Video Of The Artist At Work.




above: Snooki, Taylor Lautner and Robert Pattison pancakes

Artist Katherine Kalnes of La Grange, Illinois has been frying up celebrity pancake portraits with Batter Blaster (pancake batter in a can) for awhile now. The 26 year old Kalnes adds frosting for hair and blueberries, raisins and chocolate chips for the eyes.


above: Katherine Kalnes at work with Batter Blaster.

You may have seen the Justin Bieber, Ryan Gosling. Kelly Ripa, Stephen Colbert and Ellen Degeneres pancake portraits on HuffPo or Oddity Central, but Snooki and the heart throbs from the Twilight movies, Taylor Lautner and Robert Pattison, are two of her latest delicious additions.

Ryan Gosling:

Justin Bieber:

Kelly Ripa:

Ellen Degeneres:

Stephen Colbert:


Video of an interview with the artist for NBC Chicago:


all images courtesy of and ©katherine Kalnes

A Self Promotional Print Campaign for Digital Retouching By Dare for The Orange Apple.






Dare of Vancouver has created this visually compelling print campaign for - as one might guess - digitial retouching by Canada's The Orange Apple. Creatives take note... The Orange Apple was approached by Andrew Ablas and Rob Sweetman of Dare to create the three ads below (as opposed to the client soliciting the campaign) which show two dimensional drawings springing to life as three dimension worlds.

Mountains:


Sci-Fi:


Buildings:


Credits:
Advertising Agency: Dare, Vancouver, Canada
Creative Directors: Bryan Collins, Rob Sweetman
Art Directors: Andrew Alblas, Rachel Harrison
Copywriter: Darien Campbell
Photographer: Paul Lang
Retoucher: The Orange Apple
Published: April 2012


Courtesy of Ads of The World.

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