Painting and Politics in Northern Europe

Painting and Politics in Northern Europe
Title Painting and Politics in Northern Europe PDF eBook
Author Margaret Deutsch Carroll
Publisher Penn State University Press
Pages 300
Release 2008
Genre Art
ISBN

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" ... offers a chronological account of political engagement in works by early modern Northern European painters Jan van Eyck, Pieter Bruegel the Elder, Peter Paul Rubens, and Frans Snyders."--Page 4 of cover.

Medieval Painting in Northern Europe

Medieval Painting in Northern Europe
Title Medieval Painting in Northern Europe PDF eBook
Author Unn Plahter
Publisher Archetype Publications
Pages 312
Release 2006
Genre Art
ISBN

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This text of analytical and art historical research on medieval painting and polychromy is published to commemorate the 70th birthday of Unn Plahter.

The Primacy of the Image in Northern European Art, 1400–1700

The Primacy of the Image in Northern European Art, 1400–1700
Title The Primacy of the Image in Northern European Art, 1400–1700 PDF eBook
Author Debra Cashion
Publisher BRILL
Pages 631
Release 2017-08-21
Genre Art
ISBN 9004354123

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The Primacy of the Image in Northern Art 1400-1700: Essays in Honor of Larry Silver is an anthology of 42 essays written by distinguished scholars on current research and methodology in the art history of Northern Europe of the late medieval and early modern periods. Written in tribute to Larry Silver, Farquhar Professor of the History of Art at the University of Pennsylvania, the topics are inspired by Professor Silver’s renowned scholarship in these areas: Early Netherlandish Painting and Prints; Sixteenth-Century Netherlandish Painting; Manuscripts, Patrons, and Printed Books; Dürer and the Power of Pictures; Prints and Printmaking; and Seventeenth-Century Painting. Studies of specific artists include Hans Memling, Albrecht Dürer, Hans Baldung Grien, Hieronymus Bosch, Pieter Bruegel, Hendrick Goltzius, and Rembrandt.

Cultural Contact and the Making of European Art since the Age of Exploration

Cultural Contact and the Making of European Art since the Age of Exploration
Title Cultural Contact and the Making of European Art since the Age of Exploration PDF eBook
Author Mary D. Sheriff
Publisher Univ of North Carolina Press
Pages 236
Release 2010-06-21
Genre Art
ISBN 0807898198

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Art historians have long been accustomed to thinking about art and artists in terms of national traditions. This volume takes a different approach, suggesting instead that a history of art based on national divisions often obscures the processes of cultural appropriation and global exchange that shaped the visual arts of Europe in fundamental ways between 1492 and the early twentieth century. Essays here analyze distinct zones of contact--between various European states, between Asia and Europe, or between Europe and so-called primitive cultures in Africa, the Americas, and the South Pacific--focusing mainly but not exclusively on painting, drawing, or the decorative arts. Each case foregrounds the centrality of international borrowings or colonial appropriations and counters conceptions of European art as a "pure" tradition uninfluenced by the artistic forms of other cultures. The contributors analyze the social, cultural, commercial, and political conditions of cultural contact--including tourism, colonialism, religious pilgrimage, trade missions, and scientific voyages--that enabled these exchanges well before the modern age of globalization. Contributors: Claire Farago, University of Colorado at Boulder Elisabeth A. Fraser, University of South Florida Julie Hochstrasser, University of Iowa Christopher Johns, Vanderbilt University Carol Mavor, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Mary D. Sheriff, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Lyneise E. Williams, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Pieter Bruegel’s Historical Imagination

Pieter Bruegel’s Historical Imagination
Title Pieter Bruegel’s Historical Imagination PDF eBook
Author Stephanie Porras
Publisher Penn State Press
Pages 217
Release 2016-02-23
Genre Art
ISBN 027108457X

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The question of how to understand Bruegel’s art has cast the artist in various guises: as a moralizing satirist, comedic humanist, celebrator of vernacular traditions, and proto-ethnographer. Stephanie Porras reorients these apparently contradictory accounts, arguing that the debate about how to read Bruegel has obscured his pictures’ complex relation to time and history. Rather than viewing Bruegel’s art as simply illustrating the social realities of his day, Porras asserts that Bruegel was an artist deeply concerned with the past. In playing with the boundaries of the familiar and the foreign, history and the present, Bruegel’s images engaged with the fraught question of Netherlandish history in the years just prior to the Dutch Revolt, when imperial, religious, and national identities were increasingly drawn into tension. His pictorial style and his manipulation of traditional iconographies reveal the complex relations, unique to this moment, among classical antiquity, local history, and art history. An important reassessment of Renaissance attitudes toward history and of Renaissance humanism in the Low Countries, this volume traces the emergence of archaeological and anthropological practices in historical thinking, their intersections with artistic production, and the developing concept of local art history.

Empress Maria Theresa and the Politics of Habsburg Imperial Art

Empress Maria Theresa and the Politics of Habsburg Imperial Art
Title Empress Maria Theresa and the Politics of Habsburg Imperial Art PDF eBook
Author Michael Elia Yonan
Publisher Penn State Press
Pages 244
Release 2011
Genre Biography & Autobiography
ISBN 9780271037226

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"Explores the intersections between monarchy, gender, and art through an investigation of the visual and architectural culture of the eighteenth-century Habsburg empress Maria Theresa"--Provided by publisher.

Disharmony of the Spheres

Disharmony of the Spheres
Title Disharmony of the Spheres PDF eBook
Author JENNIFER. NELSON
Publisher
Pages 216
Release 2020-12
Genre
ISBN 9780271083414

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Anxious about the threat of Ottoman invasion and a religious schism that threatened Christianity from within, sixteenth-century northern Europeans increasingly saw their world as disharmonious and full of mutual contradictions. Examining the work of four unusual but influential northern Europeans as they faced Europe's changing identity, Jennifer Nelson reveals the ways in which these early modern thinkers and artists grappled with the problem of cultural, religious, and cosmological difference in relation to notions of universals and the divine. Focusing on northern Europe during the first half of the sixteenth century, this book proposes a complementary account of a Renaissance and Reformation for which epistemology is not so much destabilized as pluralized. Addressing a wide range of media-including paintings, etchings and woodcuts, university curriculum regulations, clocks, sundials, anthologies of proverbs, and astrolabes-Nelson argues that inconsistency, discrepancy, and contingency were viewed as fundamental features of worldly existence. Taking as its starting point Hans Holbein's famously complex double portrait The Ambassadors, and then examining Philipp Melanchthon's measurement-minded theology of science, Georg Hartmann's modular sundials, and Desiderius Erasmus's eclectic Adages, Disharmony of the Spheres is a sophisticated and challenging reconsideration of sixteenth-century northern European culture and its discomforts. Carefully researched and engagingly written, Disharmony of the Spheres will be of vital interest to historians of early modern European art, religion, science, and culture.