To Celebrate Easter, Here Are 10 Art-Historical Easter Eggs Hidden Inside Famous Works of Art | Artnet News (2024)

Easter is upon us, and even now, parents are plotting where to stash their colored eggs and egg-shaped chocolate objects throughout their houses. Of course, in contemporary parlance, the term “Easter Egg” has also come to mean any hidden reference stashed in a work of art. So, for the occasion, artnet News had our staff pick a few of their favorite secrets hidden away in art history’s greats. Enjoy!

Giotto’s Gassy Devil

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Giotto, Death and Ascension of St. Francis (1300). Basilica of Saint Francis of Assisi, Assisi, Italy.

One panel of a famous cycle by the Renaissance founder Giotto in the upper church of the Basilica of Saint Francis in Assisi, Italy, the Death and Ascension of St Francis depicts its subject being laid to rest and carried to heaven. In 2011, however, medievalist Chiara Frugoni discovered a heretofore unnoticed hidden image lurking within the cloud of smoke between heaven and earth: “a powerful portrait, with a hooked nose, sunken eyes and two dark horns,” i.e. the devil.

To Celebrate Easter, Here Are 10 Art-Historical Easter Eggs Hidden Inside Famous Works of Art | Artnet News (2)

Giotto, Death and Ascension of St. Francis (1300), detail. Basilica of Saint Francis of Assisi, Assisi, Italy.

What does it mean? The basilica’s chief restorer told Reuters that he thought Giotto added the hidden detail “to have a bit of fun.”

—Ben Davis

Michelangelo’s Hidden Brain

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Michelangelo Buonarroti, The Creation of Adam in the Sistine Chapel at the Vatican Museums, Rome.

Art historians have been studying Michelangelo’s Sistine Chapel for hundreds of years, but it is doctors who’ve had some of the more surprising discoveries about the masterpiece in recent decades. In 1990, physician Frank Meshberger pointed out that in the panel The Creation of Adam, the region defined by the swooping cloak around God the Father resembles an anatomically correct cutaway of the human skull (the theory recently surfaced once again on the HBO show Westworld). Meshberger theorized that it was Michelangelo’s way of showing how God gave Adam both the gift of human life and of human intelligence.

Neurosurgery researchers at Johns Hopkins University also later came to believe that Michelangelo depicted a brain stem and spinal cord along the throat of God in the panel The Separation of Light from Darkness. ​The throat had long appeared anatomically incorrect to art historians, lending some credence to the researchers’ otherwise outlandish-seeming position. Regardless of Michelangelo’s intent, we know he was an avid student of human anatomy, and other experts in neuroanatomy say they detect elements of their own training in his work (oh, and they’ve made graphics). The researchers told NPR that they showed an image of the work to some of their colleagues “and without saying much, they spontaneously recognized the brainstem.”

—Rachel Corbett

Dürer’s Puzzling Square

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Albrecht Dürer, Melancholia I (1514).

The enigmatic and iconic Melancholia doesn’t just have an Easter Egg, but a whole basket of Easter Eggs. Let us focus, however, on the aspect of it that is quite literally the most puzzling: the “magic square” at the top right. The number grid’s significance is this: It yields the same number, 34, if you add up any of its columns, rows, or four quadrants.

What’s the meaning of the figure? Such perfect mathematical balance made it a symbol of the divine, on the one hand, and since the subject ofMelancholia is the link between melancholy and genius, perhaps also a sign of thinking too much. And yet, in fact, the opposite has been suggested: This particular four-by-four “magic square” is known as the “Square of Jupiter,” and associated with that planet. Since everything else in Dürer’s print is associated with Saturn and the saturnine temperament, whose influence Jupiter was thought to counteract, the square might in fact stand as a kind of healing talisman here.

To Celebrate Easter, Here Are 10 Art-Historical Easter Eggs Hidden Inside Famous Works of Art | Artnet News (5)

Dürer’s Square of Jupiter.

Then again, there might be another reason the German Renaissance master used this particular permutation of the square: The two spaces in the center of its bottom-most row are 15 and 14, and 1514 also happens to be the year Melancholia I was made.

—Ben Davis

Holbein’s Spooky Skull

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Hans Holbein the Younger, The Ambassadors (1533). Collection of the National Gallery, London.

Holbein’s masterpiece likely stands as one of the most famous Easter Eggs in all of art history. Although the painting’s ostensible subjects are the two titular French diplomats, ambassador to England Jean de Dinteville and half-bishop/half-ambassador Georges de Selve, the painter gives the foreground over to the one figure we all answer to eventually.

To Celebrate Easter, Here Are 10 Art-Historical Easter Eggs Hidden Inside Famous Works of Art | Artnet News (7)

Hans Holbein the Younger, The Ambassadors (1533), detail with
Holbein’s anamorphotic object seen at an angle. Collection of the National Gallery, London.

The center-bottom of the work harbors what at first appears to be an abstract smear of black and yellowish-gray. When viewed at an oblique angle from the right side of the painting, the skewed shape “corrects” to reveal an imposing skull—possibly Holbein’s reminder that death lies in wait even when it can be temporarily hidden by youth, earthly riches, and influence.

—Tim Schneider

Caravaggio’s Self-Serving Image

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Caravaggio, Bacchus (ca. 1595). Collection of the Uffizi, Florence.

It might be enough for the average hedonistic artist to just paint their visage onto the god of wine and fertility and call it a day. But Caravaggio was as extraordinary a hedonist as he was a painter. As covered in Stephen Akey’s “Thug: A Life of Caravaggio in 69 Paragraphs,” the man wasn’t just sleeping with most of his models; he may have been pimping them. He wasn’t just drinking to excess; he was getting hospitalized. And he wasn’t just threatening to duel people; he legit killed a guy. Maybe that full-throttle temperament is why Caravaggio couldn’t resist throwing a tiny portrait of himself at the easel inside Bacchus’s carafe—a nugget of art historical mischief rediscovered in 2009 through advanced imaging devices.

To Celebrate Easter, Here Are 10 Art-Historical Easter Eggs Hidden Inside Famous Works of Art | Artnet News (9)

Infrared detail of Bacchus with Caravaggio’s hidden self-portrait.

As always with my favorite Old Master and ne’er-do-well, if it was worth doing, it was worth overdoing.

—Tim Schneider

Caravaggio’s Encoded Confession

To Celebrate Easter, Here Are 10 Art-Historical Easter Eggs Hidden Inside Famous Works of Art | Artnet News (10)

Caravaggio, David with The Head of Goliath, (1610). Courtesy of the Ministry of Cultural Heritage and Activities and Tourism, collection of the Galleria Borghese, Rome.

Flash forward to the final year of Caravaggio’s life. Unlike many of his contemporaries, who often embedded glorified versions of themselves in their paintings, the Baroque master took an unusually introspective approach in his depiction of David With the Head of Goliath:He painted his own likeness as the severed head.

To Celebrate Easter, Here Are 10 Art-Historical Easter Eggs Hidden Inside Famous Works of Art | Artnet News (11)

Caravaggio, David with The Head of Goliath, (1610), detail of the sword. Courtesy of the Ministry of Cultural Heritage and Activities and Tourism, collection of the Galleria Borghese, Rome.

Going even further, some art historians have suggested that the letters encrypted on David’s sword ‘H—AS O.S.’ stand for the Latin humilitas occidit superbiam (humility kills pride). By representing himself as the embodiment of the evil Goliath, Caravaggio acknowledges the murder of the Maltese knight Ranuccio Tomassoni in a street brawl in Rome in 1606 and, right at the wire, repents for his sin and failure as a Christian.

—Henri Neuendorf

Peale’s Fruitful Signature

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Raphaelle Peale, Still Life With Oranges (c. 1818). Photo courtesy of the Toledo Museum of Art.

The oldest surviving son of pioneering colonial painter Charles Willson Peale, Raphelle Peale’s career as an artist was practically predestined, as his father named nine of his 17 children after Old Masters. In what was perhaps a bit of a running joke within the family, the Peales would sometimes include a curling fruit peel in their works to serve as a figurative signature and obvious pun on their last name. Thus, there’s an apple peel on the table in Charles’s The Peale Family, the ambitious family portrait he painted between 1773 and 1809 as an advertisem*nt of his skill as a portraitist.

When Raphaelle struggled to attract clients of his own, he turned to still lifes, which could appeal to a broader audience than any one specific patron. So if you’re wandering through the American wing at any given museum, keep an eye on the still-life paintings—if there’s an elegantly peeled orange, that’s just Raphelle Peale, signing his name a second time.

—Sarah Cascone

Van Gogh’s Secret Supper

To Celebrate Easter, Here Are 10 Art-Historical Easter Eggs Hidden Inside Famous Works of Art | Artnet News (13)

Vincent van Gogh, Café Terrace at Night (1888). Collection of tthe Kröller-Müller Museum, Otterlo, Netherlands.

Maybe this one seems a bit of a stretch, but since it’s very related to Easter (and Passover), bear with me. There is a theory floating around out there that Van Gogh’s painting of a nighttime café is, in fact, a coded reference to the Last Supper. Think about it: There are 12 customers under that charming awning, and, in the middle, a central figure. Some might dismiss the white-clad individual as a waitress, but researcher Jared Baxter maintains the figure is meant to represent Jesus.

To Celebrate Easter, Here Are 10 Art-Historical Easter Eggs Hidden Inside Famous Works of Art | Artnet News (14)

Detail of the cafe, with possible cross emphasized.

As supporting evidence, he cites the cross-like forms in the windows behind and a letter the artist wrote his brother Theo around the time he completed the painting. In it, Van Gogh says he feels a “tremendous need for, shall I say the word—for religion.”

—Julia Halperin

Steichen’s Stab at Greatness

To Celebrate Easter, Here Are 10 Art-Historical Easter Eggs Hidden Inside Famous Works of Art | Artnet News (15)

Edward Steichen, J.P Morgan (1903).

The stunningly fierce portrait of robber baron J.P. Morgan more or less made Edward Steichen’s storied career. It is the product of a session that lasted exactly three minutes, during which he got two shots, the first, more relaxed that became the basis of a painted portrait, and the second which defined Morgan’s image as a hard-driving capitalist. The detail that seizes the imagination, however, is the way that Steichen captured his hand gripping the handle of the chair he is in, which produces the optical illusion that Morgan is brandishing a dagger pointed out at the viewer. Steichen claimed the detail wasn’t intentional. It is hard to forget once you have seen it.

—Ben Davis

Picasso’s Dancerly Cameo

To Celebrate Easter, Here Are 10 Art-Historical Easter Eggs Hidden Inside Famous Works of Art | Artnet News (16)

Pablo Picasso’s The Three Dancers (1925) at the Tate gallery, February 13, 2012. Photo courtesy Carl Court /AFP/Getty Images.

If you go down to Tate Modern’s “Picasso 1932: Love, Fame, Tragedy” this Easter, look closely at the artist’s great painting The Three Dancers of 1925. Some think Picasso included a self-portrait in the painting, making an Alfred Hitchco*ck-like appearance in the background. Check out the face to the right of the outstretched right arm of the central dancer.

To Celebrate Easter, Here Are 10 Art-Historical Easter Eggs Hidden Inside Famous Works of Art | Artnet News (17)

Detail of Picasso’s The Three Dancers, featuring the disputed silhouette. Image courtesy NichoDesign on Flickr.

Picasso maintained that the silhouette was his friend, the artist Ramon Pichot, who committed suicide in 1925. In fact, he told Roland Penrose, who persuaded a reluctant Picasso to sell the painting to the Tate in 1965, that the work should be called The Death of Pichot rather than The Three Dancers.

—Javier Pes

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To Celebrate Easter, Here Are 10 Art-Historical Easter Eggs Hidden Inside Famous Works of Art | Artnet News (2024)

FAQs

To Celebrate Easter, Here Are 10 Art-Historical Easter Eggs Hidden Inside Famous Works of Art | Artnet News? ›

One explanation for this custom is that eggs were formerly a forbidden food during Lent, so people would paint and decorate them to mark the end of the period of penance and fasting, then eat them on Easter as a celebration. Easter egg hunts and egg rolling are two popular egg-related traditions.

What is the history of painting eggs for Easter? ›

One explanation for this custom is that eggs were formerly a forbidden food during Lent, so people would paint and decorate them to mark the end of the period of penance and fasting, then eat them on Easter as a celebration. Easter egg hunts and egg rolling are two popular egg-related traditions.

Where did hiding Easter eggs come from? ›

Some suggest that its origins date back to the late 16th century, when the Protestant reformer Martin Luther organised egg hunts for his congregation. The men would hide the eggs for the women and children to find. This was a nod to the story of the resurrection, in which the empty tomb was discovered by women.

What is the history of the Easter egg? ›

Before the introduction of Christianity, eggs were a symbol of fertility and restoration. European pagans, or non-Christians, viewed eggs as symbolic of regeneration, specifically tied to springtime. This symbolism was borrowed by early Christians and applied to the Resurrection of Jesus Christ.

What do the eggs symbolize in Easter? ›

The egg itself became a symbol of the Resurrection. Just as Jesus rose from the tomb, the egg symbolized new life emerging from the eggshell. In the Orthodox tradition, eggs are painted red to symbolize the blood that Jesus shed on the cross. The egg-coloring tradition has continued even in modern secular nations.

What color were Easter eggs originally? ›

According to many sources, the Christian custom of Easter eggs started among the early Christians of Mesopotamia, who stained them with red colouring "in memory of the blood of Christ, shed at His crucifixion".

Who invented dying Easter eggs? ›

Early Christians in Mesopotamia dyed eggs in the period after Easter. The practice was adopted by the Orthodox Churches, and from there it spread into Western Europe. Eggs represent new life and rebirth, and it's thought that this ancient custom was absorbed into Easter celebrations.

What is the longest unfound Easter egg? ›

Dubbing it as the longest undiscovered Easter Egg ever, the one hidden in the Donkey Kong port for the Atari 400 and 800 took 26 years to find. Programmer Landon Dyer unveiled its existence. If you fulfill a very specific list of criteria before killing Mario, you can see Dyer's initials on the game's title screen.

What is the Easter Bunny's real name? ›

The Easter Bunny is a rabbit that delivers presents and eggs to children on Easter. The tradition goes back a very long way just like the ones about Santa Claus and the Tooth Fairy. His real name is Peter Cottontail, just like how Santa's real name is either Saint Nicholas or Kris Kringle.

Why do Christians hide Easter eggs? ›

The eggshell was seen as a symbol of the tomb from which Jesus emerged, while the egg itself represented new life. Over time, the tradition of decorating and hiding eggs at Easter became popular among Christians, and it remains an important part of Easter celebrations in many cultures around the world.

Is Easter egg pagan? ›

Easter eggs are believed to have originated in medieval Europe but may have been unrelated to any Christian tradition. Some historians believe Easter eggs came from Anglo-Saxon festivals in the spring to celebrate pagan goddess Eostre.

What color was the first Easter egg died? ›

Early Christians in Mesopotamia dyed eggs red to mimic the blood that Christ shed during his crucifixion.

What is pagan Easter called? ›

One of the pagan influences of the holiday involves its name. While some cultures refer to the holiday through variations of its Latin name "Pascha," many others refer to it by a name that originated in northern European traditions – Easter. "Easter" is linked to the pagan springtime goddess Eostre, according to Hann.

When did Jesus rise from the dead? ›

The resurrection of Jesus (Biblical Greek: ἀνάστασις τοῦ Ἰησοῦ) is the Christian belief that God raised Jesus from the dead on the third day after his crucifixion, starting – or restoring – his exalted life as Christ and Lord.

Why is it the Easter Bunny and not a chicken? ›

It actually has nothing to do with the biblical Easter (obviously). It dates back to 13th Century Germany where they worshiped gods and goddesses including the goddess Eostra, who was the goddess of fertility. Since rabbits are very fertile and eggs represent fertility, that's how the bunnies and eggs came into play.

Is there an Easter egg emoji? ›

Unfortunately for these searchers, there is no one, single, official Easter emoji. But there are many options for the holiday. Animal symbols include a Rabbit Face 🐰, Rabbit 🐇, Hatching Chick 🐣, and Baby Chick 🐤 emoji. There is also an Egg emoji 🥚, though there's no decorated Easter egg.

What is the history of egg paint? ›

Decorating Eggs Originated In Ancient Times

The eggs were traded across borders, where Assyrian and Phoenician artists painted and engraved the eggs with intricate designs. Historians believe the ancient Persians also painted eggs.

Why do Polish people paint eggs at Easter? ›

Traditionally, the designs were painted during Lent. They have symbolic meanings connected with beauty, fertility, rebirth, and life. Real pisanki are created by drawing on the eggs with a melted wax and then dipping them into dyes.

What is the Polish tradition of painting Easter eggs? ›

On the Saturday before Easter Sunday, Poles paint hard-boiled eggs (called pisanki). Some use store-brought kits which make the colouring and decorating easier, others continue to make dyes the traditional way – with boiled onion skins.

Why do we color eggs on Easter pagan? ›

Adding the symbols of color to the eggs specifies the power given to them -- the Druids were said to dye eggs red, like menstrual blood, and bury them in the newly plowed fields in late winter to draw life force energy into the land and encourage fertility and abundance.

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