The Entombment is a
glue-size tempera-on-linen painting 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 now-lost
altarpiece is thought to have contained a central crucifixion scene flanked by four wing panel works half its height – two on either side – depicting
scenes from the life of Christ. The smaller panels would have been paired in a format similar to Bouts's 1464–1468
Altarpiece of the Holy Sacrament. The larger work was probably commissioned for export to Italy, possibly to a
Venetian patron whose identity is lost. The painting is an austere but affecting portrayal of sorrow and grief. It shows four female and three male mourners grieving over the body of Christ. They are, from left to right,
Nicodemus,
Mary Salome,
Mary of Clopas, the
Virgin Mary,
John the Evangelist,
Mary Magdalene and
Joseph of Arimathea.
The Entombment was first recorded in a mid-19th century Milan inventory and has been in the
National Gallery, London, since its purchase on the gallery's behalf by
Charles Lock Eastlake in 1861.
Painting credit: Dieric Bouts