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The Last Supper — Earth Tones

The Last Supper — Earth Tones

Regular price $150
Regular price $150 Sale price $150
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The Last Supper framed canvas print in an earth tone palette. Jesus and the twelve disciples are sketched in light charcoal outline above a table of interlocking blocks, anchored by a single black marble band on warm linen.

"Do this in remembrance of me."—Luke 22:19

✦ Ready to Hang with pre-installed hanging wire. Frame depth 2 inches. The No Frame option arrives gallery-wrapped on solid wood stretcher bars.

✦ Made in the USA 🇺🇸
Handcrafted in our Los Angeles art studio.

✦ Fast Shipping — Same Day!
Orders placed before noon EST ship same day.

✦ Easy Delivery
Free Shipping Protective Packaging 100% Insured Ships to All 50 States & Worldwide Zero Risk

Art Details

Designed for contemporary, mid-century modern, organic modern, and gallery-style homes that want communion art with a confident point of view. The figures are sketched so lightly they hover like a memory above the table, while the table itself carries the weight: interlocking blocks of taupe and greige crossed by a black marble band with fine white veining. The Last Supper — Earth Tones works above a dining table, sideboard, console, or buffet, in modern Christian homes, churches, prayer corners, and Bible study spaces.

  • Subject: The Last Supper, Luke 22:19, Jesus and the twelve disciples sketched in charcoal above an abstract block table
  • Style: abstract, modern, contemporary, minimalist, Christian wall art
  • Palette: warm linen beige, soft ivory, charcoal linework, ink black, marble accent
  • Orientation: horizontal
  • Best for: dining rooms, sideboards and buffets, modern churches and fellowship halls, entryways, gallery walls, contemporary statement walls
  • Material: archival-grade canvas, giclée print with fade-resistant inks
  • Frame: handcrafted wood frame, 2-inch depth. The No Frame option arrives gallery-wrapped on solid wood stretcher bars.
  • Sizes: 18×12, 30×20, 48×32, and 60×40 inches
    Custom size? Email us at help@christianmodern.shop
  • Frame finishes: Light Wood, Brown Wood, Gold, Black, or No Frame
  • Made in: Los Angeles, California, USA
  • Includes: pre-installed hanging wire, arrives ready to hang out of the box
  • Most-gifted occasions: confirmation, weddings and anniversaries, housewarmings and first apartments, gifts for art lovers and modern-design fans, pastor and church gifts

If you're looking for The Last Supper in a softer beige and ivory palette see ➔ The Last Supper — Beige Tones Version

Shipping, Exchanges, Returns & Trust

  • Free shipping, 100% insured to all 50 states and worldwide
  • Same-day shipping on orders placed before noon EST
  • Estimated delivery: 3-4 business days within the US
  • Exchanges and returns accepted within 30 days of delivery for your peace of mind

Contact us at help@christianmodern.shop for support in the rare case of delivery damage.

About the Last Supper

The Last Supper is the final meal Jesus shared with His twelve disciples on the night before His crucifixion, recorded in Matthew 26:17-30, Mark 14:12-26, Luke 22:7-20, and John 13. During the meal, Jesus took bread and wine, blessed them, and instituted what Christian tradition calls the Eucharist or Holy Communion, a sacrament shared across Catholic, Orthodox, and Protestant churches: "This is my body, given for you. Do this in remembrance of me" (Luke 22:19).

Leonardo da Vinci's 1495-1498 mural of the Last Supper in Milan made the scene the most recognized religious image in Western art, and twentieth-century artists from Andy Warhol to Susan Dorothea White reinterpreted it as abstract and conceptual work. This Christian Modern piece sits in that lineage: the disciples reduced to delicate sketch outlines above a table of interlocking blocks, anchored by a single black marble band with fine white veining. Reverent, contemporary, and unmistakably scripture-rooted.

The Last Supper — Earth Tones Common Questions

What does "do this in remembrance of me" mean?
Jesus spoke these words at the Last Supper as He broke bread with His disciples (Luke 22:19), and the apostle Paul repeats them in 1 Corinthians 11:24-25, the earliest written account of the meal. The Greek word translated "remembrance" is anamnesis, and it means far more than recalling a memory. Anamnesis is an active remembrance, a re-living in the present, the way Israel relived the Exodus each Passover rather than merely thinking about it. When Jesus said "do this in remembrance of me," He was instituting communion as an ongoing practice: every time Christians take the bread and the cup, the sacrifice He was about to make is brought into the present moment. That is why churches across Catholic, Orthodox, and Protestant traditions have repeated this meal continually for two thousand years.

Is this an abstract version of da Vinci's Last Supper?
It is an original abstract interpretation of the Last Supper scene, not a copy of Leonardo da Vinci's mural. Twentieth-century artists from Andy Warhol onward reimagined the famous composition as abstract and conceptual work, and this Christian Modern piece sits in that lineage: the thirteen figures reduced to delicate charcoal sketch outlines, the table built from interlocking blocks, and a single black marble band with fine white veining anchoring the center. The result is reverent and unmistakably scripture-rooted, but it reads as contemporary art first, which is exactly what homes searching for an abstract Last Supper usually want.

What makes the Earth Tones version different from the Beige version?
The two share the same Last Supper scene but speak in different voices. Earth Tones is the abstract one: the figures are sketched in light charcoal outline above a table built from interlocking blocks, with a black marble band running through the center, all set on a warm linen ground. It suits rooms that want a confident, gallery-style focal point. The Beige version renders the full scene tone-on-tone in ivory and cream, like a faded fresco, for homes that want maximum softness. Pick Earth Tones for contrast and architecture, Beige for quiet.

What size canvas fits above a sideboard or buffet?
Above a sideboard, buffet, or console, the 48x32 inch ($480 framed) is the proportional pick for most pieces of furniture, and the 60x40 inch ($750 framed) turns a full dining wall into a single statement. A reliable rule for sideboards: let the canvas cover about two-thirds of the furniture's width, and leave 6 to 10 inches of wall between the frame and the surface below so the art reads as anchored rather than floating. The 30x20 inch ($330 framed) fits a narrow console or breakfast nook, and the 18x12 inch ($150 framed) works in a kitchen or as the centerpiece of a gallery wall.

Is the Last Supper a good piece for a modern church or fellowship hall?
Yes. Because the scene depicts the institution of communion, it is a natural fit for the spaces where a congregation gathers and shares: fellowship halls, church lobbies, ministry offices, and Bible study rooms. The abstract earth-tone style suits contemporary church architecture in a way traditional reproductions often do not, and the 60x40 inch size carries clearly across a large room. Many churches also choose it as a dedication or anniversary piece for a newly built or renovated gathering space.

Will this work in a contemporary, mid-century modern, or organic modern home?
Yes. The Earth Tones Last Supper was designed for exactly these interiors. The warm linen ground, charcoal linework, and black marble accent give it a confident, gallery-style point of view that suits contemporary, mid-century modern, organic modern, and transitional spaces. It works as a focal point above a dining table or sideboard and pairs well with neutral walls, natural wood, leather, and modern lighting.

Does it come ready to hang?
Yes. Every canvas arrives with pre-installed hanging wire, ready to mount out of the box with no extra tools or framing required. The framed versions include a handcrafted 2-inch deep wood frame in Light Wood, Brown Wood, Gold, or Black; the Black and Brown Wood finishes are the most-paired frames for this charcoal and marble palette. The No Frame option ships gallery-wrapped on solid wood stretcher bars with the image wrapping the edges for a clean modern look.

Where is Christian Modern art made and how is it printed?
Each piece is handcrafted in the Christian Modern art studio in Los Angeles, California. The print is produced on archival-grade canvas using fade-resistant giclee inks rated to last over 100 years without color shift in normal indoor light, and the wood frame is built in-house. Every order ships free across all 50 US states and worldwide, fully insured against transit damage, with same-day shipping on orders placed before noon EST.

View full details

The Last Supper framed canvas print in an earth tone palette. Jesus and the twelve disciples are sketched in light charcoal outline above a table of interlocking blocks, anchored by a single black marble band on warm linen.

"Do this in remembrance of me."—Luke 22:19

✦ Ready to Hang with pre-installed hanging wire. Frame depth 2 inches. The No Frame option arrives gallery-wrapped on solid wood stretcher bars.

✦ Made in the USA 🇺🇸
Handcrafted in our Los Angeles art studio.

✦ Fast Shipping — Same Day!
Orders placed before noon EST ship same day.

✦ Easy Delivery
Free Shipping Protective Packaging 100% Insured Ships to All 50 States & Worldwide Zero Risk

Art Details

Designed for contemporary, mid-century modern, organic modern, and gallery-style homes that want communion art with a confident point of view. The figures are sketched so lightly they hover like a memory above the table, while the table itself carries the weight: interlocking blocks of taupe and greige crossed by a black marble band with fine white veining. The Last Supper — Earth Tones works above a dining table, sideboard, console, or buffet, in modern Christian homes, churches, prayer corners, and Bible study spaces.

  • Subject: The Last Supper, Luke 22:19, Jesus and the twelve disciples sketched in charcoal above an abstract block table
  • Style: abstract, modern, contemporary, minimalist, Christian wall art
  • Palette: warm linen beige, soft ivory, charcoal linework, ink black, marble accent
  • Orientation: horizontal
  • Best for: dining rooms, sideboards and buffets, modern churches and fellowship halls, entryways, gallery walls, contemporary statement walls
  • Material: archival-grade canvas, giclée print with fade-resistant inks
  • Frame: handcrafted wood frame, 2-inch depth. The No Frame option arrives gallery-wrapped on solid wood stretcher bars.
  • Sizes: 18×12, 30×20, 48×32, and 60×40 inches
    Custom size? Email us at help@christianmodern.shop
  • Frame finishes: Light Wood, Brown Wood, Gold, Black, or No Frame
  • Made in: Los Angeles, California, USA
  • Includes: pre-installed hanging wire, arrives ready to hang out of the box
  • Most-gifted occasions: confirmation, weddings and anniversaries, housewarmings and first apartments, gifts for art lovers and modern-design fans, pastor and church gifts

If you're looking for The Last Supper in a softer beige and ivory palette see ➔ The Last Supper — Beige Tones Version

Shipping, Exchanges, Returns & Trust

  • Free shipping, 100% insured to all 50 states and worldwide
  • Same-day shipping on orders placed before noon EST
  • Estimated delivery: 3-4 business days within the US
  • Exchanges and returns accepted within 30 days of delivery for your peace of mind

Contact us at help@christianmodern.shop for support in the rare case of delivery damage.

About the Last Supper

The Last Supper is the final meal Jesus shared with His twelve disciples on the night before His crucifixion, recorded in Matthew 26:17-30, Mark 14:12-26, Luke 22:7-20, and John 13. During the meal, Jesus took bread and wine, blessed them, and instituted what Christian tradition calls the Eucharist or Holy Communion, a sacrament shared across Catholic, Orthodox, and Protestant churches: "This is my body, given for you. Do this in remembrance of me" (Luke 22:19).

Leonardo da Vinci's 1495-1498 mural of the Last Supper in Milan made the scene the most recognized religious image in Western art, and twentieth-century artists from Andy Warhol to Susan Dorothea White reinterpreted it as abstract and conceptual work. This Christian Modern piece sits in that lineage: the disciples reduced to delicate sketch outlines above a table of interlocking blocks, anchored by a single black marble band with fine white veining. Reverent, contemporary, and unmistakably scripture-rooted.

The Last Supper — Earth Tones Common Questions

What does "do this in remembrance of me" mean?
Jesus spoke these words at the Last Supper as He broke bread with His disciples (Luke 22:19), and the apostle Paul repeats them in 1 Corinthians 11:24-25, the earliest written account of the meal. The Greek word translated "remembrance" is anamnesis, and it means far more than recalling a memory. Anamnesis is an active remembrance, a re-living in the present, the way Israel relived the Exodus each Passover rather than merely thinking about it. When Jesus said "do this in remembrance of me," He was instituting communion as an ongoing practice: every time Christians take the bread and the cup, the sacrifice He was about to make is brought into the present moment. That is why churches across Catholic, Orthodox, and Protestant traditions have repeated this meal continually for two thousand years.

Is this an abstract version of da Vinci's Last Supper?
It is an original abstract interpretation of the Last Supper scene, not a copy of Leonardo da Vinci's mural. Twentieth-century artists from Andy Warhol onward reimagined the famous composition as abstract and conceptual work, and this Christian Modern piece sits in that lineage: the thirteen figures reduced to delicate charcoal sketch outlines, the table built from interlocking blocks, and a single black marble band with fine white veining anchoring the center. The result is reverent and unmistakably scripture-rooted, but it reads as contemporary art first, which is exactly what homes searching for an abstract Last Supper usually want.

What makes the Earth Tones version different from the Beige version?
The two share the same Last Supper scene but speak in different voices. Earth Tones is the abstract one: the figures are sketched in light charcoal outline above a table built from interlocking blocks, with a black marble band running through the center, all set on a warm linen ground. It suits rooms that want a confident, gallery-style focal point. The Beige version renders the full scene tone-on-tone in ivory and cream, like a faded fresco, for homes that want maximum softness. Pick Earth Tones for contrast and architecture, Beige for quiet.

What size canvas fits above a sideboard or buffet?
Above a sideboard, buffet, or console, the 48x32 inch ($480 framed) is the proportional pick for most pieces of furniture, and the 60x40 inch ($750 framed) turns a full dining wall into a single statement. A reliable rule for sideboards: let the canvas cover about two-thirds of the furniture's width, and leave 6 to 10 inches of wall between the frame and the surface below so the art reads as anchored rather than floating. The 30x20 inch ($330 framed) fits a narrow console or breakfast nook, and the 18x12 inch ($150 framed) works in a kitchen or as the centerpiece of a gallery wall.

Is the Last Supper a good piece for a modern church or fellowship hall?
Yes. Because the scene depicts the institution of communion, it is a natural fit for the spaces where a congregation gathers and shares: fellowship halls, church lobbies, ministry offices, and Bible study rooms. The abstract earth-tone style suits contemporary church architecture in a way traditional reproductions often do not, and the 60x40 inch size carries clearly across a large room. Many churches also choose it as a dedication or anniversary piece for a newly built or renovated gathering space.

Will this work in a contemporary, mid-century modern, or organic modern home?
Yes. The Earth Tones Last Supper was designed for exactly these interiors. The warm linen ground, charcoal linework, and black marble accent give it a confident, gallery-style point of view that suits contemporary, mid-century modern, organic modern, and transitional spaces. It works as a focal point above a dining table or sideboard and pairs well with neutral walls, natural wood, leather, and modern lighting.

Does it come ready to hang?
Yes. Every canvas arrives with pre-installed hanging wire, ready to mount out of the box with no extra tools or framing required. The framed versions include a handcrafted 2-inch deep wood frame in Light Wood, Brown Wood, Gold, or Black; the Black and Brown Wood finishes are the most-paired frames for this charcoal and marble palette. The No Frame option ships gallery-wrapped on solid wood stretcher bars with the image wrapping the edges for a clean modern look.

Where is Christian Modern art made and how is it printed?
Each piece is handcrafted in the Christian Modern art studio in Los Angeles, California. The print is produced on archival-grade canvas using fade-resistant giclee inks rated to last over 100 years without color shift in normal indoor light, and the wood frame is built in-house. Every order ships free across all 50 US states and worldwide, fully insured against transit damage, with same-day shipping on orders placed before noon EST.

  • "it was perfect for my dining room"
    -Andrea R.

  • "Beautiful. Subtle. Gorgeous. Great in the dining room."
    -Sally K.

  • "The art is amazing! It's exactly as it looks in the picture & the framing is super high quality"
    -Jacqueline S.

  • "We love ours!"
    -Timothy & Anna B.

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