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.
Featured Value Pages
Most Expensive by Artist
Explore Painting Details
The Old Maidservant
in Judith Beheading Holofernes by Caravaggio
Caravaggio’s old maidservant—traditionally called Abra—stands at the painting’s right edge, sack open, ready to hide Holofernes’s head. Her lined face and fixed stare turn her into a visceral witness and logistical accomplice, sharpening the scene’s brutal present-tense and heightening Judith’s youth and resolve.
Holofernes's Scream
in Judith Beheading Holofernes by Caravaggio
Holofernes’s Scream is the painting’s audible center—a gaping, last-breath outcry that Caravaggio freezes at the split second between life and death. By fixing our gaze on the open mouth, the artist fuses sound with sight to deliver Counter‑Reformation immediacy and a moral reckoning in real time.
Judith's Hesitant Expression
in Judith Beheading Holofernes by Caravaggio
Judith’s face in Caravaggio’s Judith Beheading Holofernes holds the scene’s moral voltage: a furrowed brow and averted gaze that register revulsion even as the sword bites. By pinning this hesitation in raking light, Caravaggio fuses Counter‑Reformation urgency with raw psychology, making virtue look difficult—and therefore real.
The Blood-Soaked Sheets
in Judith Slaying Holofernes by Artemisia Gentileschi
The white bed-linens, quickly stained by the flow from Holofernes’s neck, form the painting’s visual stage and moral shock. Artemisia Gentileschi uses these blood-soaked sheets to pin the action to the general’s bed while heightening Baroque immediacy through a stark white-and-crimson contrast [1][2].
Featured Artworks

Eugène Boch
Vincent van Gogh (1888)
Vincent van Gogh’s 1888 portrait of <strong>Eugène Boch</strong> turns a friend into a visionary presence: a glowing, ocher head set before an <strong>infinite blue</strong> pricked with stars. The lone bright star at upper left and the cobalt field make the warm face and jacket <strong>vibrate</strong> from the night, declaring art as vocation rather than mere likeness <sup>[1]</sup><sup>[2]</sup>.

L'Arlésienne
Vincent van Gogh (1888)
In L'Arlésienne, Vincent van Gogh distills a moment of inward pause: a woman from Arles leans her cheek on her hand before a <strong>butter‑yellow wall</strong>, her <strong>black-and-blue silhouette</strong> set against a warm field. The <strong>red parasol</strong> and <strong>green gloves</strong> lie unused on the table, signaling a suspension of public persona in favor of private thought <sup>[1]</sup><sup>[3]</sup>.

The Church at Auvers
Vincent van Gogh (1890)
In The Church at Auvers, Vincent van Gogh turns a modest Gothic church into a <strong>restless, living form</strong> against a <strong>cobalt sky</strong>. Two forked paths, a lone passerby, and windows sunk in <strong>ultramarine shadow</strong> stage a tension between the glowing world outside and the dim, unresponsive building within <sup>[1]</sup><sup>[2]</sup>.

Study from Innocent X
Francis Bacon (1962)
Francis Bacon’s Study from Innocent X recasts the papal portrait as an image of <strong>enthroned vulnerability</strong>. Hemmed by thin <strong>cage-lines</strong> on a curved <strong>stage-like dais</strong>, the red-suffused figure trembles between flesh and regalia, turning authority into exposure <sup>[1]</sup><sup>[3]</sup>.

Riverbank with Trees
Vincent van Gogh (1887)
Riverbank with Trees is a compact 1887 study in which Vincent van Gogh turns a modest Seine embankment into a field of <strong>vibration and light</strong>. Diagonal sweeps of lilac and ochre sand collide with <strong>staccato foliage</strong> and a single upright trunk, fusing observation with sensation <sup>[1]</sup><sup>[2]</sup>.

Study for Portrait of Pope Innocent X
Francis Bacon (1953)
Francis Bacon’s Study for Portrait of Pope Innocent X converts a seat of power into a <strong>cage of panic</strong>: a pontiff pinned in a golden <strong>space‑frame</strong>, mouth <strong>wrenched open</strong> beneath a torrent of vertical strokes. Violets, blacks, and acidic yellows turn vestments into a <strong>shroud</strong>, while the white robe flares like a spectral residue.