
The Last Supper framed canvas print in brown tones. Jesus and the twelve disciples gather at the long table for His final meal, rising softly out of an aged plaster wall styled as a weathered fresco in walnut, taupe, and deep espresso brown.
"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.
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Handcrafted in our Los Angeles art studio.
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Art Details
Designed for warm, grounded homes that lead with natural wood, leather, and earth, and carry faith quietly. The scene emerges from a textured plaster field as if it has been part of the wall for years, the long table floating low in deep open brown with Jesus at the still center. The Last Supper — Brown Tones works above a dining table, sideboard, console, or buffet, in kitchens, breakfast nooks, entryways, prayer corners, and modern Christian homes, and pairs naturally with rustic, Tuscan, transitional, warm-modern, and farmhouse interiors.
- Subject: The Last Supper, Luke 22:19, Jesus and the twelve disciples at His final meal, rising tone-on-tone from an aged plaster wall
- Style: modern, warm, rustic fresco-inspired, Christian wall art
- Palette: warm brown, walnut, taupe, deep espresso
- Orientation: horizontal
- Best for: dining rooms above the table, sideboards and buffets, kitchens and breakfast nooks, entryways, prayer corners, Bible study spaces, gallery 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.
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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: first communion, confirmation, weddings and anniversaries, housewarmings into a new home, gifts for parents and grandparents, and pastor and church gifts
If you're looking for The Last Supper in a softer beige and ivory palette see ➚ The Last Supper — Beige
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 Luke 22:19
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 for centuries the scene was painted directly onto refectory and dining-hall walls as fresco. This Christian Modern piece honors that fresco lineage in warm brown: thirteen figures rising tone-on-tone from an aged, weathered plaster field, the table balanced as a still center, the deep open brown holding everything in stillness. It is communion art for warm modern Christian homes, dining rooms, prayer corners, and Bible study spaces.
Luke 22:19 Common Questions
What color is this Last Supper canvas, and what rooms does it suit?
This is the warm brown version of the Last Supper. The whole piece is built in walnut, taupe, and deep espresso brown on a textured, aged-plaster ground, so it reads like a weathered fresco rather than a bright print. That warmth makes it a natural fit for rooms built on wood, leather, and earth tones: rustic and Tuscan dining rooms, transitional and warm-modern spaces, farmhouse kitchens, and studies or libraries with darker furniture. It pairs especially well with natural-wood and walnut tables, leather seating, and stone or brick. For a lighter, ivory-and-cream take on the same scene, see the beige version of this Last Supper.
Why does this Last Supper look like an old fresco?
That is the intent. For centuries the Last Supper was painted as fresco straight onto the plaster walls of dining halls and refectories, Leonardo da Vinci's Milan mural being the most famous example, so the scene carries a deep association with aged, wall-painted surfaces. This piece leans into that history: the figures are rendered tone-on-tone and rise softly out of a textured, weathered plaster field rather than sitting on top of a flat background, which gives it the quiet, time-worn look of a fresco that has lived on a wall for generations. It is an original modern interpretation, not a reproduction, but it is built to feel old-world and settled rather than freshly printed.
Which frame looks best with the brown version?
Because the artwork is already warm, the wood frames flatter it most. The Brown Wood and Light Wood finishes echo the walnut and taupe in the canvas for a seamless, lived-in look, Gold adds a quiet richness for a more formal dining room, and Black gives the warmth a crisp, grounded edge. Every framed version is a handcrafted 2-inch deep wood frame; the No Frame option ships gallery-wrapped on solid wood stretcher bars with the image wrapping the edges for a clean modern look.
What decor styles does a brown Last Supper canvas pair with?
The warm brown palette is built for rooms that run to wood and earth rather than to white and cool tones. It settles naturally into rustic and Tuscan dining rooms, farmhouse and transitional spaces, warm-modern and organic-modern interiors, and studies or libraries with leather and darker wood. It works against neutral walls, brick, and stone, and it pairs especially well with natural-wood and walnut furniture and leather seating. If your home leans cooler, brighter, or strictly minimalist, the beige version of this Last Supper is the better match; this one is for spaces that want warmth and depth.
What size brown Last Supper canvas works on a large wall?
For a wide or empty wall, the 60x40 inch ($750 framed) reads as a full statement piece and carries across a large dining room or open-plan space, while the 48x32 inch ($480 framed) suits most standard dining and living-room walls. A reliable rule is to choose a canvas about two-thirds as wide as the furniture or wall span beneath it. The 30x20 inch ($330 framed) suits a console, buffet, or breakfast nook, and the 18x12 inch ($150 framed) works in a kitchen, entryway, or as part of a gallery wall. The long horizontal format is made to stretch along a wall rather than sit small in the center of it.
Is a brown Last Supper a good gift for someone with a warm, wood-toned home?
Yes, and that is where this version stands out. For a recipient whose home runs to wood, leather, and earth tones, the warm brown palette will sit far more naturally than a bright or cool-toned print, which makes it a thoughtful first communion, confirmation, wedding, anniversary, or housewarming gift for that person specifically. It also suits pastors, grandparents, and anyone who keeps a more traditional or rustic home. The 30x20 inch ($330 framed) is an easy size to give and place, while the 48x32 inch ($480 framed) makes the meaningful family-piece gift.
Why do people hang the Last Supper where they share meals?
Because the painting depicts the meal that became communion. Placing it where a household gathers to eat, above the dining table, a sideboard, or in the kitchen, sets the table where Jesus broke bread above the table where the family breaks bread, turning ordinary dinners into a quiet echo of the sacrament. It is a tradition that runs through Catholic, Orthodox, and Protestant homes alike. The warm brown palette of this version makes that connection feel especially settled in a wood-and-leather dining room, as if the piece had always belonged there.
Will the brown tones fade or shift over time?
No. Each piece is printed on archival-grade canvas using fade-resistant giclee inks rated to last over 100 years without color shift in normal indoor light, so the walnut, taupe, and espresso tones stay deep and true for generations. Each canvas is handcrafted in the Christian Modern studio in Los Angeles, California, the wood frame is built in-house, and every order ships free across all 50 US states and worldwide, fully insured, with same-day shipping on orders placed before noon EST.