Explore Meaning, Value, and Details in Great Paintings
Discover famous artworks, understand what they mean, see how much they are worth, and zoom in on the details that matter.
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Saint Matthew at the Table
in The Calling of Saint Matthew by Caravaggio
At the tax table, the bearded collector—Saint Matthew—arrests mid‑count, hand to chest, as a raking beam and Christ’s gesture single him out. Caravaggio crystallizes the instant when a worldly bookkeeper becomes an apostle, turning a dim room into a theater of conversion.
The Beam of Light
in The Calling of Saint Matthew by Caravaggio
The Calling of Saint Matthew pivots on a single diagonal beam of light that slices in from the upper right, visually echoing Christ’s outstretched hand. More than illumination, this beam is the visible form of the call itself—picking Matthew out of the dim room and binding the painting’s drama to the chapel space it was made to inhabit.
Christ's Pointing Hand
in The Calling of Saint Matthew by Caravaggio
Christ’s pointing hand is the catalyst of The Calling of Saint Matthew: a quiet but sovereign gesture that turns a dim tavern into the stage of conversion. Echoing Michelangelo’s Adam while cutting through shadow with the same diagonal beam of light, the hand makes grace visible and directs the story’s every response.
The Split Between Color and Black-and-White
in Marilyn Diptych by Andy Warhol
Warhol’s vertical split—color at left, black‑and‑white at right—turns Marilyn Diptych into a two‑part drama of glamour and disappearance. It reads like a secular altarpiece to a modern icon, showing how media saturates an image until it fades to a ghost of itself.
Featured Artworks

Jeanne Hébuterne (au foulard)
Amedeo Modigliani (1919)
Jeanne Hébuterne (au foulard) crystallizes Modigliani’s late style into a poised emblem of <strong>tenderness held in restraint</strong>. The elongated neck, <strong>masklike visage</strong>, and cool navy dress are pierced by the <strong>red scarf</strong> at the throat, a chromatic node that concentrates feeling and presence <sup>[1]</sup><sup>[2]</sup>. The subtly indicated pupils—rare in many Modigliani portraits—sharpen her psychological immediacy amid the flattened, terracotta field <sup>[1]</sup>.

Nu couché (sur le côté gauche)
Amedeo Modigliani (1917)
Nu couché (sur le côté gauche) is a 1917 oil painting in which Amedeo Modigliani monumentalizes a reclining nude through a continuous, sculptural contour and a flattened, nearly void backdrop. The figure’s warm terracotta body, set against crisp white sheets and a dark field, fuses <strong>modern candor</strong> with <strong>classical poise</strong> <sup>[1]</sup><sup>[2]</sup>. The direct, appraising gaze and masklike face assert a new, <strong>autonomous modern nude</strong>.

In This Case
Jean-Michel Basquiat (1983)
In This Case thrusts a flayed, X‑ray‑like head against a <strong>searing red field</strong>, where boxed teeth, a target‑bright <strong>single eye</strong>, and schematic glyphs above the brow turn the face into a site of <strong>classification and alarm</strong>. Jean-Michel Basquiat fuses anatomy with street mark‑making to stage a confrontation with <strong>mortality, surveillance, and Black embodiment</strong> <sup>[1]</sup><sup>[2]</sup>.

Nu couché
Amedeo Modigliani (1917)
Amedeo Modigliani’s Nu couché (1917) recasts the reclining nude as a <strong>modern icon of desire</strong>—a body reduced to <strong>lyric contour</strong> and glowing planes that stretch diagonally across a crimson bed. Warm, peach-toned flesh is keyed against <strong>saturated reds</strong> and <strong>cool blue pillows</strong>, fusing intimacy with monumentality while stripping away myth to confront eroticism directly <sup>[2]</sup><sup>[3]</sup>. Painted amid wartime Paris, it helped ignite the 1917 censorship scandal and later became a market landmark, underscoring its status as a defining image of <strong>modernism’s nude</strong> <sup>[4]</sup><sup>[5]</sup>.

Dustheads
Jean-Michel Basquiat (1982)
Dustheads stages two electrified, mask-like figures lunging out of a saturated black field, their concentric eyes and bared teeth pumping with <strong>manic, nocturnal energy</strong>. The title’s nod to PCP (“angel dust”) fuses <strong>ecstasy and menace</strong>, turning the scene into a charged allegory of altered perception and survival in downtown New York, 1982 <sup>[1]</sup><sup>[6]</sup>.

Boy and Dog in a Johnnypump
Jean-Michel Basquiat (1982)
<strong>Boy and Dog in a Johnnypump</strong> (1982) stages a wiry, x‑rayed boy with arms flung wide beside a bristling dog under a red arc that doubles as a halo and the spray of a New York <strong>johnnypump</strong>. Basquiat fuses <strong>childhood play</strong> and <strong>urban peril</strong> in a heat‑drenched field of oranges, yellows, and mints, emblematic of his breakthrough <strong>Neo‑Expressionism</strong> and the 1982 Modena cycle. The painting asserts Black presence and survival with ferocious scale and velocity <sup>[1]</sup><sup>[2]</sup>.