The Descent from the Cross: Second Plate (B., Holl. 81; H. 103; New Holl. 119)The QuacksalverOld Man with Beard, Fur Cap and Velvet CoatChrist Driving the Money Changers from the TempleThe Descent from the Cross: Second PlateThe Descent from the Cross by TorchlightMan in a Coat and Fur Cap Leaning Against a BankSelf Portrait with SaskiaJan Asselijn, Painter (‘Krabbetje’)The Circumcision: Small PlateDiana at the BathJan Uytenbogaert, 'The Gold Weigher' (B., Holl. 281; H. 167; New Holl. 172)Jacob Haaringh ('Young Haaringh')The Flight into Egypt: Small PlatePeter and John Healing the Cripple at the Gate of the TempleSt. Jerome Kneeling in Prayer, Looking DownThe Raising of Lazarus: The Larger PlateSheet of Studies: Beggar Couple, Head of an Old Woman (fragment)The Virgin Nursing the ChildBeggar Man and Woman behind a Bank
The Descent from the Cross: Second Plate (B., Holl. 81; H. 103; New Holl. 119)The QuacksalverOld Man with Beard, Fur Cap and Velvet CoatChrist Driving the Money Changers from the TempleThe Descent from the Cross: Second PlateThe Descent from the Cross by TorchlightMan in a Coat and Fur Cap Leaning Against a BankSelf Portrait with SaskiaJan Asselijn, Painter (‘Krabbetje’)The Circumcision: Small PlateDiana at the BathJan Uytenbogaert, 'The Gold Weigher' (B., Holl. 281; H. 167; New Holl. 172)Jacob Haaringh ('Young Haaringh')The Flight into Egypt: Small PlatePeter and John Healing the Cripple at the Gate of the TempleSt. Jerome Kneeling in Prayer, Looking DownThe Raising of Lazarus: The Larger PlateSheet of Studies: Beggar Couple, Head of an Old Woman (fragment)The Virgin Nursing the ChildBeggar Man and Woman behind a Bank

“Old Masters” refers to European artists—mostly painters and sculptors—working between the Renaissance and the turn of the 19th century. Together, the Old Masters span the movements of Gothic art, the Renaissance, Mannerism, Baroque, the Dutch Golden Age, Rococo, Neoclassicism, and Romanticism. The category includes some of the most seminal artists in Western history, from Leonardo da Vinci, Michelangelo, and Albrecht Dürer to Caravaggio, Rembrandt, and Jacques-Louis David.

This is based on the artwork’s average dimension.