Crucifixion (van Eyck)

Crucifixion is a early-15th-century drawing of the death of Jesus attributed to Jan van Eyck or his workshop, now in the collection of the Museum Boijmans van Beuningen. It is variously dated to the early 1430s, implying an original van Eyck likely created as a predatory drawing for his Crucifixion and Last Judgement diptych, or c. 1440, making it a pastiche by a workshop member completed after Jan's death.

The only other known van Eyck drawing is the 1437 Study for Cardinal Niccolò Albergati, if Saint Barbara is considered as an unfinished painting, although there are similarities between the two; especially in its perspective, angle of the observer's point of view, and the shadings of the rock formations. The quality of draftsmanship is of the first rate, and it is perhaps the most elaborate and complex surviving drawing from the 16th century.