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Exhibition Guide

A black line drawing on a white background depicts three abstract, stick-like figures with elongated limbs in dynamic poses, suggesting interaction with each other. The number 10 is visible in the bottom right corner.

Henri Matisse. Detail of The Stations of the Cross, Chapel of the Rosary, Vence. All copyright-protected works by Henri Matisse © 2025 Succession H. Matisse / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York. Photo: © Musée Matisse Nice/François Fernandez

A black line drawing on a white background depicts three abstract, stick-like figures with elongated limbs in dynamic poses, suggesting interaction with each other. The number 10 is visible in the bottom right corner.

Station 10: Jesus Is Stripped of His Garments Visual Description

    Station 10 is positioned in the upper left corner of the top row. The scene is approximately three tiles high and four tiles wide. In it, three outlined figures engage with one another, representing the Stations of the Cross story in which Roman soldiers strip off Jesus’ clothes. The figure in the center, representing Jesus, stands upright, expressed by a line drawing with two defined legs and a head. The abstract, linear figures on either side, representing Roman soldiers, curve outward at the waist—one to the left, the other to the right—as if pulling against the central figure. Their arms merge, showing two arms shared between the three figures. The strong diagonals created by the figures suggest an aggressive and humiliating treatment of Jesus.