'This subtle, thoroughly informed study of the Nazarenes, nineteenth-century Germany's most influential religious painters, is going to transform their stature among art historians, cultural historians, and scholars of religion. Grewe's book will become an important resource for understanding the international significance of the Nazarene painting for Christian art in Europe and North America, where it was widely admired as a model for devotional imagery. Long reviled among art critics and all but ignored by art historians outside of Germany, the group merits the penetrating and consistently thoughtful treatment it receives from Cordula Grewe.' David Morgan, Professor of Religion, Duke University, USA 'Overlooked and misunderstood, the Nazarene movement is nevertheless one of the truly pivotal episodes in the history of modern art in its long duration, and Grewe’s account is the most ambitious and incisive to date.' Joseph Leo Koerner, Victor S. Thomas Professor of the History of Art and Architecture, Harvard University, USA ’Recommended.’ Choice 'In this stunningly informative and boldly written book [...], Cordula Grewe seeks to revise the historiography of the German Nazarene period (1808-62). ...an essential contribution to nineteenth-century art history.' Material Religion