eindtijdbeelden
Eindtijdbeelden, literally “end‑time images”, are a genre of visual art that portrays scenes from Christian eschatology, primarily the Last Judgment, the Apocalypse of St. John, and related themes. The term, used in Dutch theological and art historical literature, refers both to individual works and to the collective aesthetic tradition that developed in the late medieval and Renaissance periods. In the Middle Ages, painters such as Jan van Eyck and the Limbourg brothers produced intricate polyptychs and panel paintings with concentric circles of souls, angels and demons, reflecting contemporary interpretations of Revelation 20–21. The High Renaissance saw master‑class treatments by Michelangelo, whose Sistine Chapel ceiling includes the famous “Fall of Man” and the descent from Heaven, and by Raphael in the “Transitus” cycle. The Baroque period added dramatic chiaroscuro, as seen in Caravaggio’s “Judgment of Paris” and the elaborate frescoes of the Capuchin Church in Palermo, where the visionary plague imagery mixes with eschatological symbols.
In modern times eindtijdbeelden have been appropriated by artists confronting contemporary crises, creating installations that juxtapose