7 Bizarre Easter Eggs Hidden in Great Works of Art

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We tend to think of classic art as being all dignified and serious, if perhaps a little stuffy. But that's only because we're not looking closely enough. As we've pointed out before, a lot of classical art is like a "Where's Waldo?" picture, but with more bare breasts and less mockery from your peers if they catch you puzzling over it.

The Ambassadors

7 Bizarre Easter Eggs Hidden in Great Works of Art
Wikipedia

The Ambassadors by Hans Holbein the Younger is an enigmatic masterpiece loaded with enough strategic placements and hidden meanings to frustrate Stanley Kubrick. The portrait is a masterwork of perspective study, delving so deeply into the subject that it seemingly contains the 16th century equivalent of a Photoshop error.

7 Bizarre Easter Eggs Hidden in Great Works of Art

Shoulder poofiness = 300%

The Easter Egg:

But that's actually a nifty trick called anamorphosis. Why, all you have to do is turn the picture sideways ...

7 Bizarre Easter Eggs Hidden in Great Works of Art

And boom! Holo-skull.

7 Bizarre Easter Eggs Hidden in Great Works of Art

See? This 3-D bullshit has been going on for centuries.

The whole thing was Holbein's elaborate way of illustrating that no matter what, everybody dies. But considering that this crazy pseudo-hologram was painted by hand all the way back in 1533, we're assuming that maxim didn't apply to Holbein himself, who just hopped onto his hover-farthing and warped back to his home dimension when his time was up.

Raphael's The School of Athens

7 Bizarre Easter Eggs Hidden in Great Works of Art

The School of Athens by Raffaello is perhaps the single most iconic image of the High Renaissance that is also the cover of Use Your Illusion I and II.

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Coincidentally, the Renaissance was also when Chinese Democracy was first announced.

The Easter Egg:

While we could spend all day talking about the cameos Raphael slipped into the fresco ...

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That's Socrates, all four of the ninja turtles and many, many others. It's like the Ocean's 11 of paintings.

... they're nothing compared to the Easter Egg Renaissance master Donato Bramante contributed to the project. According to Giorgio Vasari's Lives of the Most Excellent Painters, Sculptors, and Architects, Raphael had Bramante design "the architecture" for the fresco and, sure enough, Bramante's contribution was a carbon copy of the floor plans for the new St. Peter's Basilica he was working on just down the street. The School of Athens wound up offering a ground-level glimpse at the completed work more than a century before it would be finished.

7 Bizarre Easter Eggs Hidden in Great Works of Art
Wikipedia

It's a nice enough church, but the glare will literally melt your corneas.

Bramante already had the enormous cathedral completed in his head, and thanks to Raphael he was able to slip a sneak peak of the structure within the fresco, just like a Renaissance Pixar film. Well, if Pixar was slipping in references to movies that wouldn't be released until 2126, that is. We just feel bad for all the hardcore church fans out there who caught the teaser and got super stoked for this new blockbuster cathedral, only to see the release date and realize they'd be passing on those pre-ordered tickets to their grandkids.

7 Bizarre Easter Eggs Hidden in Great Works of Art
Wikipedia

Let us pray!

It was basically Duke Nukem Forever: The Church.

All of Al Hirschfeld's Drawings from 1945 Onward

7 Bizarre Easter Eggs Hidden in Great Works of Art
littlemailbox

Al Hirschfeld was an American illustrator and caricaturist best known for his black-and-white portraits of celebrities and political figures all throughout the 20th century. Think of those '80s posters in Asian hair salons, but, y'know, classy:

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And without flecks of blood on the frames.

The Easter Egg:

Hirschfeld also managed to hide his daughter Nina's name in damn near every single one of his thousands of artworks.

7 Bizarre Easter Eggs Hidden in Great Works of Art
artdvdreview

"This will always be a good idea."

Hirschfeld decided to push this concept to a level he later described as "harmless insanity." And while we agree with the "insanity," we don't know about that "harmless" part: Presumably his other daughter, Xernophystoles Mernozence Hirschfeld, felt a little hurt and neglected when her name turned up conspicuously absent ...

7 Bizarre Easter Eggs Hidden in Great Works of Art
penciljack

"I worked her name into a caterpillar once, but doing so gave me carpal tunnel syndrome."

The man became so adept and prolific that the Pentagon eventually approved a $60,000 grant to train the eyes of bomber pilots by having them spot the "hidden Ninas" in Hirschfeld's drawings.

7 Bizarre Easter Eggs Hidden in Great Works of Art
penciljack

"HEY ASSHOLES, I ALSO DRAW GREAT CARTOONS, TOO, YOU KNOW."

Pieter Bruegel the Elder's Continuing Fetish

7 Bizarre Easter Eggs Hidden in Great Works of Art
Wikipedia

Pieter Bruegel the Elder warranted a previous appearance in recognition for his fantastically exhaustive catalog of asses. But it wasn't all butts and brews for old Bruegel -- he also created some pretty cool, surreal stuff like this:

7 Bizarre Easter Eggs Hidden in Great Works of Art
Wikipedia

... is that bored satyr getting a blowjob?

But betwixt all the booty and David Lynch fan art, Pieter was still a classically trained artist. The Magpie on the Gallows, for example, is a spectacular example of one of his landscapes. Look at it: Serene. Pastoral. Beautiful.

7 Bizarre Easter Eggs Hidden in Great Works of Art
Wikipedia

"The hangin's at noon."

The Easter Egg:

All that lush foliage and subtle color work make it so easy to overlook the man in the bottom-left corner shitting his guts out in the bushes.

7 Bizarre Easter Eggs Hidden in Great Works of Art

Note his use of shadow to tastefully hide the sphincter.

Yeah ... Bruegel didn't really know how to stop painting asses and the things that come out of asses. Take The Fair at Hoboken for example:

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art-wallpaper

Let's go poopin' now...

7 Bizarre Easter Eggs Hidden in Great Works of Art

Everybody's learning how ...

7 Bizarre Easter Eggs Hidden in Great Works of Art

Come on a poop safari with meeee!

He had his own artistic reasons for this obsession, of course: In many of his works, defecation was used to showcase "the worst excesses of human folly."

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Wikipedia

All the best parties begin and end with public pooping.

But somewhere around the time you find yourself spending days painstakingly rendering a diarrhea waterfall, you have to stop and consider that this whole "human folly" thing might just be the spin you're putting on the fact that you're "really into poop these days."

7 Bizarre Easter Eggs Hidden in Great Works of Art

"It's good to finally be out of my 'Phlegm Phase,' though."

The National Cathedral

7 Bizarre Easter Eggs Hidden in Great Works of Art
Wikipedia

The Cathedral Church of Saint Peter and Saint Paul, better known as the Washington National Cathedral, is the sixth-largest cathedral on the planet, the second-largest in the United States and the single highest point in all of Washington. In short, it's America's answer to the European monopoly on big, majestic churches: It's super-sized, it's dignified as balls and it'll church you sideways if you so much as look at it funny, fella.

7 Bizarre Easter Eggs Hidden in Great Works of Art
Wyn Van Devanter

Our proud architectural history is about 22 years old.

The Easter Egg:

The whole place is chock-full of weird shenanigans: There's a chunk of moon rock set into one window, it boasts a fantastic boss of The Three Stooges and it is the only place of worship to contain a gargoyle of Darth Vader on its holy grounds.

7 Bizarre Easter Eggs Hidden in Great Works of Art
Laura Padgett / nationalcathedral

This arguably validates all those people who state their religion as "Jedi" on the census.

In the 1980s, the Cathedral held a contest in National Geographic's World magazine to design a grotesque for the sacred sanctum; the crazier the better. Among the competition's winners was third-place Christopher Rader, who, we should stress, was absolutely not the hastily constructed childish alias of Darth Vader.

Don't take our word for it; just listen to Christopher's close personal friend, Tarth Bader, who went on the record as saying, "Chris Rader is totally not me. Him! Totally not ... him, that other guy. That handsome, dangerous fellow with the smashing black cape. That's not Chris. Chris is just another harmless little boy. For all you know ..."

The Papal Basilica of St. Francis of Assisi

7 Bizarre Easter Eggs Hidden in Great Works of Art
Wikipedia

The Papal Basilica of St. Francis of Assisi is the proud home to some of the most famous frescoes of the Renaissance. The works of Trecento master Giotto are featured prominently throughout the Upper Church. Sadly, some of those works were severely damaged in a recent earthquake. Such sacrilege could only be the work of the devil ...

7 Bizarre Easter Eggs Hidden in Great Works of Art
Yahoo

Or mole men.

The Easter Egg:

... who was probably just trying to escape from his prison inside Giotto's painting. A team of restorers working on the church following the 1997 earthquakes found some light structural damage, a few faded spots and -- oh yeah -- the devil's face hidden in the clouds of this supposedly holy work.

7 Bizarre Easter Eggs Hidden in Great Works of Art
Yahoo / tool8

Who was apparently quite pleased with whatever he saw in that angel's crotch.

The Arnolfini Portrait

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The 15th century Flemish master Jan van Eyck was so crazy talented that his hands were basically Middle Ages HD cameras. His portfolio includes some of the most painstakingly detailed paintings of any artist of any period, but of particular note is his Arnolfini Portrait from 1434.

7 Bizarre Easter Eggs Hidden in Great Works of Art
Wikipedia

Ass-Ugly Man in Shotgun Marriage with Heavily Pregnant Ugly Woman

The Easter Egg:

There are actually four people in this portrait, and no, they're not all hiding under the man's bitchin' archaic pimp cap. Look very, very closely at that convex mirror, way in the back ...

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ENHANCE.

7 Bizarre Easter Eggs Hidden in Great Works of Art

Van Eyck actually painted the entire painting itself -- including the couple, whose POV we're apparently sharing -- backward and in fisheye inside of a tiny, almost unnoticeable piece of the background. Nobody knows for sure who the two extra figures are supposed to be, though some say the signature above the mirror means that one is Van Eyck himself. But that seems far too tame an explanation for such an impossibly crazy feat. Our leading theory? That's either Amy and the Doctor, or Scott Bakula and Robocop.

Jacopo della Quercia is the proud author of "Go @#$% Yourself!" -- An Ungentlemanly Disagreement, by Filippo Argenti and "The Sound of Laughter" in Wordplague's The Four Humors. He asks that you check out the latter since, unlike Killing Lincoln by Bill O'Reilly, the Ford's Theatre National Historic Site actually requested a copy of the book.

For more interesting Easter eggs, check out 7 Creepy Video Game Easter Eggs You'll Wish Were Never Found and 7 Insane Easter Eggs Hidden in Movies and TV Shows.

And stop by LinkSTORM because nobody wants to be back to work right now.

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Do you have an idea in mind that would make a great article? Then sign up for our writers workshop! Do you possess expert skills in image creation and manipulation? Mediocre? Even rudimentary? Are you frightened by MS Paint and simply have a funny idea? You can create an infograpic and you could be on the front page of Cracked.com tomorrow!

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