The Northern Renaissance

The Northern Renaissance
Title The Northern Renaissance PDF eBook
Author Kate Heard
Publisher Royal Collection Trust
Total Pages 0
Release 2011
Genre Art
ISBN 9781905686322

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Catalog of an exhibition held at the Queen's Gallery, Palace of Holyroodhous, April, 2011 and at the Queen's Gallery, Buckingham Palace, October, 2012.

Northern Renaissance Art, 1400-1600

Northern Renaissance Art, 1400-1600
Title Northern Renaissance Art, 1400-1600 PDF eBook
Author Wolfgang Stechow
Publisher Northwestern University Press
Total Pages 206
Release 1989
Genre Art
ISBN 9780810108493

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Northern Renaissance Art

Northern Renaissance Art
Title Northern Renaissance Art PDF eBook
Author Susie Nash
Publisher OUP Oxford
Total Pages 384
Release 2008-11-27
Genre Art
ISBN 0192842692

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This book offers a wide-ranging introduction to the way that art was made, valued, and viewed in northern Europe in the age of the Renaissance, from the late fourteenth to the early years of the sixteenth century. Drawing on a rich range of sources, from inventories and guild regulations to poetry and chronicles, it examines everything from panel paintings to carved altarpieces.While many little-known works are foregrounded, Susie Nash also presents new ways of viewing and understanding the more familiar, such as the paintings of Jan van Eyck, Rogier van der Weyden, and Hans Memling, by considering the social and economic context of their creation and reception. Throughout, Nash challenges the perception that Italy was the European leader in artistic innovation at this time, demonstrating forcefully that Northern art, and particularly that of the Southern Netherlands,dominated visual culture throughout Europe in this crucial period.

The Northern Renaissance

The Northern Renaissance
Title The Northern Renaissance PDF eBook
Author Jeffrey Chipps Smith
Publisher Phaidon
Total Pages 452
Release 2004-07-28
Genre Art
ISBN

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An up-to-date survey of this dynamic period of artistic innovation.

Art of the Northern Renaissance

Art of the Northern Renaissance
Title Art of the Northern Renaissance PDF eBook
Author Stephanie Porras
Publisher Laurence King Publishing
Total Pages 0
Release 2018-02-20
Genre Art
ISBN 9781786271655

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In this lucid account, Stephanie Porras charts the fascinating story of art in northern Europe during the Renaissance period (ca. 1400–1570). She explains how artists and patrons from the regions north of the Alps – the Low Countries, France, England, Germany – responded to an era of rapid political, social, economic, and religious change, while redefining the status of art. Porras discusses not only paintings by artists from Jan van Eyck to Pieter Bruegel the Elder, but also sculpture, architecture, prints, metalwork, embroidery, tapestry, and armor. Each chapter presents works from a roughly 20-year period and also focuses on a broad thematic issue, such as the flourishing of the print industry or the mobility of Northern artists and artworks. The author traces the influence of aristocratic courts as centers of artistic production and the rise of an urban merchant class, leading to the creation of new consumers and new art products. This book offers a richly illustrated narrative that allows readers to understand the progression, variety, and key conceptual developments of Northern Renaissance art.

The Renaissance in the North

The Renaissance in the North
Title The Renaissance in the North PDF eBook
Author Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York, N.Y.)
Publisher Metropolitan Museum of Art
Total Pages 174
Release 1987
Genre Art
ISBN 0870994344

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"In this volume, the work of the German, Dutch, Flemish, French, and English masters of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries is explored in more than one hundred reproductions. In addition to such well-known masterpieces as Van Eyck's Crucifixion and Last Judgment, Memling's Tommaso Portinari and Maria Baroncelli, Bruegel's Harvesters, Durer's woodcut The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, Cranach's Judgment of Paris, and Holbein's Erasmus of Rotterdam, this volume includes many lesser-known works in oil and on paper, as well as sculpture, decorative arts, and armor from the collections of The Metropolitan Museum of Art."--Page [2] of cover.

Erasmus, Man of Letters

Erasmus, Man of Letters
Title Erasmus, Man of Letters PDF eBook
Author Lisa Jardine
Publisher Princeton University Press
Total Pages 301
Release 2015-06-23
Genre Biography & Autobiography
ISBN 1400866170

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The name Erasmus of Rotterdam conjures up a golden age of scholarly integrity and the disinterested pursuit of knowledge, when learning could command public admiration without the need for authorial self-promotion. Lisa Jardine, however, shows that Erasmus self-consciously created his own reputation as the central figure of the European intellectual world. Erasmus himself—the historical as opposed to the figural individual—was a brilliant, maverick innovator, who achieved little formal academic recognition in his own lifetime. What Jardine offers here is not only a fascinating study of Erasmus but also a bold account of a key moment in Western history, a time when it first became possible to believe in the existence of something that could be designated "European thought."