The Fall of the Damned, alternately known as The Fall of the Rebel Angels,[1] is a monumental religious painting by Peter Paul Rubens dated around 1620.It depicts a jumble of the bodies of the damned, hurled into the abyss by archangel Michael and accompanying angels.[3] The sketch of The Fall of the Damned was made in black and red chalks, with a grey wash and is kept in the British Museum.It is assumed to be the work of a studio assistant, which Rubens then went over with a brush and oil colour.[4] The dramatic chiaroscuro of the human forms and clouds emphasizes the darkness into which these figures fall, far from the heavenly light above.