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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The Disciple's Outstretched Arms
in The Supper at Emmaus by Caravaggio
The right-hand disciple’s outflung arms seize the instant of recognition as the stranger at table is revealed as Christ. Caravaggio turns a theological revelation into a bodily shock, projecting the gesture toward us so the miracle erupts into the viewer’s space.
The Basket of Fruit
in The Supper at Emmaus by Caravaggio
Caravaggio’s basket of fruit in The Supper at Emmaus is a life-size still-life that seems to slide off the table into our space, catching light as vividly as the figures themselves. Loaded with apples, grapes, and a pear, and casting a fish-shaped shadow, it is both a bravura display of illusionism and a concentrated sign of the painting’s theological message.
Christ's Gesture of Blessing
in The Supper at Emmaus by Caravaggio
Caravaggio freezes the instant in Luke 24:30–31 when the risen Christ blesses the bread, his right hand thrust toward us as his left hovers over the loaf. The gesture is both a narrative spark—the disciples’ sudden recognition—and a theological proclamation of the Eucharist, staged with startling immediacy for the viewer.
Bacchus's Dirty Fingernails
in Bacchus by Caravaggio
Caravaggio’s Bacchus confronts us with a god who has dirt under his nails. That tiny crescent of grime, painted on the hand offering wine, collapses myth into lived reality and announces the artist’s uncompromising naturalism.
Featured Artworks

Police Gazette
Willem de Kooning (1955)
<strong>Police Gazette</strong> converts tabloid scandal into a field of charged marks: acidic yellow grounds, slashed blacks, and jolts of teal and coral collide like headlines in motion. De Kooning’s scraped, reworked surface turns the city’s noise into <strong>gesture-as-event</strong>, where half-hinted limbs and curb-like edges surface, then dissolve. As a key mid-1950s canvas, it anchors his shift to the so-called <strong>abstract urban landscapes</strong> within Abstract Expressionism <sup>[1]</sup><sup>[2]</sup>.

Interchange
Willem de Kooning (1955)
Interchange condenses the city’s churn into an arena of <strong>figure–ground flux</strong>, where mustard yellows, lilac, and sea‑blue collide and are corralled by black, calligraphic lines. De Kooning turns scraping, repainting, and slashing gestures into a living map of <strong>exchange</strong> between flesh and architecture, motion and arrest <sup>[2]</sup><sup>[3]</sup>.

Woman III
Willem de Kooning (1952–53 (often dated 1953))
Woman III stages a face‑off between <strong>figuration and abstraction</strong>: a looming, front‑facing body whose breasts and hips jut forward even as limbs smear into eddies of paint. The mask‑like eyes and toothy grin toggle between <strong>seduction and menace</strong>, while the scraped, turbulent surface asserts painting as a <strong>combat zone</strong> rather than calm depiction <sup>[1]</sup>.

Figure with Meat
Francis Bacon (1954)
Francis Bacon’s Figure with Meat fuses a screaming pontiff with two flayed carcasses that hang like grotesque wings, locking power and flesh into the same dark box. Through <strong>cage-like lines</strong>, <strong>stage-lit isolation</strong>, and paint handled as <strong>raw meat</strong>, Bacon asserts a brutal equivalence: sanctity and sovereignty are only bodies destined to decay <sup>[1]</sup><sup>[2]</sup>.

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>.