Results for 'Mural painting and decoration, Renaissance'

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  1.  6
    Calenjixa: Macxovris tażris moxatulobebi.I. Lordkipanidze, Mzia Janjalia & Nino Mataraże (eds.) - 2011 - Tʻbilisi: Giorgi Čʻubinašvilis saxelobis Kʻartʻuli xelovnebis istoriisa da żegltʻa dacʻvis kvlevis erovnuli cʻentri.
  2.  7
    Hua wai zhi yi: Han dai Kongzi jian Laozi hua xiang yan jiu.Yitian Xing - 2018 - Taibei Shi: San min shu ju gu fen you xian gong si.
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  3.  7
    Between conservation and restoration: the wall paintings in the church of the Crusaders in Abu Gosh and the authentication of the site as Emmaus.Rachel Ouizemann - 2019 - Byzantinische Zeitschrift 112 (3):935-958.
    The wall paintings in the Crusader church in Abu Gosh were conserved and restored in two different operations in the last thirty years. While the conservation revealed new iconographies of the original wall paintings, the restoration added and changed details. The discernment between the two allows us once again to discuss the meaning of the original Crusader decoration program as a whole. This article argues that the frescoes decorating the church reference a set of prominent sacred places in the Holy (...)
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  4.  9
    Filosofía Del Muralismo Mexicano: Orozco, Rivera y Siqueiros.Héctor Jaimes - 2012 - Plaza y Valdés Editores.
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  5.  6
    Religion, morality, and art: an Indian perspective.Raghunath Ghosh - 2018 - New Delhi: Northern Book Centre.
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  6. Vizantiskata estetika i srednovekovniot živopis vo Makedonija od XI i XII vek.Ivan K. Zarov - 2003 - Skopje: Tabernakul.
     
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  7.  7
    Sayu rŭl ssoda, putta: kŭrim ŭro pogo sosŏl chŏrŏm ingnŭn Pulgyo ch'ŏrhak.Ho-jin Kang - 2021 - Sŏul-si: Ch'ŏlsu wa Yŏnghŭi.
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  8.  9
    La peinture murale minoenne, III. Méthodes et techniques d'exécution.Alain Dandrau - 2001 - Bulletin de Correspondance Hellénique 125 (1):41-66.
    This last part of the study of materials and techniques used in Minoan wall-painting discusses the execution of the actual decoration itself. After a brief reminder of our knowledge of the status of the artist and his principal tools, the main stages of the process of execution are described. It thus appears that the number and connection of these différent phases, as well as the painting techniques themselves, depend on the nature of medium used: chalk or cernent. For (...)
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  9. Painting and literature of the italian renaissance in the aesthetics of Hegel.K. Stierle - forthcoming - Hegel-Studien.
  10. Stoicism.Dirk Baltzly - 2008 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
    Stoicism was one of the new philosophical movements of the Hellenistic period. The name derives from the porch (stoa poikilê) in the Agora at Athens decorated with mural paintings, where the members of the school congregated, and their lectures were held. Unlike ‘epicurean,’ the sense of the English adjective ‘stoical’ is not utterly misleading with regard to its philosophical origins. The Stoics did, in fact, hold that emotions like fear or envy (or impassioned sexual attachments, or passionate love of (...)
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  11.  12
    The New Zion of Ot’kht’a.Michele Bacci - 2022 - Convivium 9 (1):28-51.
    The lavra of Ot’kht’a Eklesia and its twin monastery at Parkhali are located in an isolated, mountainous area of present-day north-east Turkey, which, in the ninth-tenth century, gradually emerged as the politically de facto independent kingdom of Tao-Klarjet’i and as a stronghold of Georgian culture. Both lavras were established on the steep slopes of valleys carved by the tributaries of the Çoruh (Č’orox’i) river by Georgian monks seeking for those “deserts” that, in their opinion, God had reserved to them since (...)
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  12.  11
    The lost mappamundi at Chalivoy-Milon.Marcia Kupfer - 1991 - Speculum 66 (3):540-571.
    One of the most extensive ensembles of twelfth-century mural painting still extant in France has recently been reconstituted in the Church of Saint-Silvain at Chalivoy-Milon , a small village located about forty kilometers southwest of Bourges. During the late 1970s and 1980s, conservation work carried out under the auspices of Monuments Historiques recovered the entire chevet program , a portion of which was first discovered in February 1868. The stunning exposure of a complex, predominantly Christological cycle at Chalivoy-Milon (...)
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  13. Velázquez’s Democritus: Global Disillusion and the Critical Hermeneutics of a Smile.Javier Berzal de Dios - 2016 - Renaissance and Reformation 39 (1):35-62.
    Velázquez’s Democritus (ca. 1630) presents a unique encounter: not only are there few depictions in which the Greek philosopher appears with a sphere that shows an actual map, but Velázquez used a court jester as a model for Democritus, thus placing the philosopher within a courtly space. When we study the painting in relation to the literary interests of the Spanish Golden Age and its socio-political circumstances, we can see the figure of Democritus as far from just another instantiation (...)
     
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  14.  35
    Re-presenting racial reality:Chicago’s new (media) Negro artists of the depression era.Richard A. Courage - 2012 - Technoetic Arts 10 (2-3):309-318.
    Since literary historian Robert Bone published his seminal essay ‘Richard Wright and the Chicago Renaissance’ in 1986, scholars have created new cartographies of previously unexplored terrain in American cultural history. The earliest studies focused on literature, but more recently attention has turned to other disciplines, including visual arts. Recent publication of The Muse in Bronzeville: African American Creative Expression in Chicago, 1932–1950 (2011) by Robert Bone and Richard A. Courage promises to decisively broaden scholarly understandings of the scope and (...)
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  15.  50
    The mirror and painting in early Renaissance texts.Yvonne Yiu - 2005 - Early Science and Medicine 10 (2):187-210.
    In Italy, notably Florence, the late fourteenth and the fifteenth centuries witnessed the proliferation of texts that discuss the relationship between the mirror and painting. In them, the mirror is closely associated with major innovations of the time such as naturalistic representation and linear perspective. On a technical level, the authors describe the mirror's function in the painting of self-portraits and recommend it be used to draw foreshortened objects more easily and to judge the quality of finished paintings. (...)
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  16.  10
    Inaugural Year Gifts 1984-85: An Exhibition of Selected Paintings, Works on Paper, Sculpture and Decorative Arts.Curtis Carter - unknown
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  17.  27
    Greater and lesser religious practices in 15th and 16th century Portuguese mural painting[REVIEW]Luís Urbano Afonso - 2010 - Cultura:11-23.
    Existem perto de 140 monumentos portugueses que ainda conservam pintura mural realizada entre os finais do século XV e os meados do século XVI. Por vicissitudes históricas diversas, a distribuição destes monumentos pelo território nacional é muito desigual, verificando-se uma concentração em templos rurais situados sobretudo no território de Entre-Douro-e- -Minho (c. 30%), em Trás-os-Montes (c. 25%) e na Beira Interior (c. 20%).A análise da iconografia destas pinturas permite tirar várias conclusões a respeito das principais devoções da época. Verifica-se (...)
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  18.  20
    Moormann E.M. Divine Interiors: Mural Paintings in Greek and Roman Sanctuaries. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2011. Pp. vii + 259, illus. €55. 978908-9642615. [REVIEW]Stephanie Pearson - 2013 - Journal of Hellenic Studies 133:276-277.
  19. Raphael's Art of Representation: Political Narrative and the Grounds of Truth in the Stanza D'Eliodoro.Michael Schwartz - 1994 - Dissertation, Columbia University
    This dissertation investigates how art, truth, and politics are tightly integrated in Raphael's historical narratives in the Stanza d'Eliodoro. ;The first chapter argues for the importance of paying careful attention to pictorial structure--that close analysis of painting can make a strong contribution to the social history of art. The second chapter begins this interpretive path. It first describes the room's decorative ensemble as a whole and how the histories are located within its complex figurative scheme. Then, drawing upon Martin (...)
     
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  20.  15
    Women on the Edge: The'Saletta delle Dame'of the Palazzo Salvadego in Brescia.Rebecca Norris - 2012 - In Norris Rebecca (ed.), The Music Room in Early Modern France and Italy: Sound, Space and Object. pp. 115.
    Form and content give rise to the question of function in the Saletta delle Dame of the Palazzo Salvadego. It is a uniquely decorated space in which frescos cover the four walls, treating the viewer to an all-round vista of the countryside. Mediating between illusion and reality are eight life-size depictions of women in contemporary dress, whom, set in pairs behind a fictive balustrade, focus their attention towards the centre of the room. In the vaulted ceiling are painted musical instruments, (...)
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  21. Truth and Perspective: Gadamer on Renaissance Painting.David Liakos - 2021 - International Yearbook for Hermeneutics 20 (1):286-305.
    This essay develops a critical interpretation of Gadamer’s account of Renaissance painting. My point of departure is a brief reference in Truth and Method to Leon Battista Alberti, the Italian Renaissance humanist who developed an influential mathematical theory of perspective in painting. Through an explication of Gadamer’s critique of Alberti and of perspective generally, I argue that what is ultimately at stake in Gadamer’s confrontation with Alberti is Gadamer’s opposition to relativism and subjectivism and his downgrading (...)
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  22.  23
    Christine Sciacca, ed., Florence at the Dawn of the Renaissance: Painting and Illumination, 1300–1350. Los Angeles: J. Paul Getty Museum, 2012. Pp. 448; 240 color figures. $65. ISBN: 9781606061268. [REVIEW]Julian Gardner - 2013 - Speculum 88 (4):1163-1165.
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  23.  3
    Foucault on Critical Agency in Painting and the Aesthetics of Existence.Michael Kelly - 2013 - In Christopher Falzon, Timothy O'Leary & Jana Sawicki (eds.), A Companion to Foucault. Malden Mass.: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 243–263.
    In this chapter, the author aims to make a case that Foucault does indeed have a viable conception of critical agency. The issue of critical agency emerges implicitly and explicitly throughout Foucault's work, but appears consistently. The key capacities of critical agency are present all along in Foucault's discussions of painting and, moreover, they culminate in the aesthetics of existence. The kind of critical agency evident in Foucault's discussions of various painters from the Renaissance to modern art can (...)
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  24.  41
    Cupid and psyche in renaissance painting before Raphael.Luisa Vertova - 1979 - Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 42 (1):104-121.
  25.  55
    Looking for an Artificial Eye: On the Borderline between Painting and Topography.Filippo Camerota - 2005 - Early Science and Medicine 10 (2):263-286.
    The use of instruments for drawing from life is documented since the fifteenth century in a variety of books, drawings and actual devices. Almost all of the instruments invented for this purpose belong to the linear perspective tradition, being conceived as mechanical expressions of a geometric principle, namely the intersection of the visual pyramid. On the basis of a close but controversial analysis of some important paintings of the early Renaissance, David Hockney and Charles Falco have concluded to a (...)
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  26.  25
    Homage to Illustration: Story Telling in Paint and Marble.Ellen Handler Spitz - 2015 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 49 (3):66-82.
    Art teaches us not only what to see but what to be.Artists refashion stories with paintbrush and chisel. Their narrations reach back through time to the mysteries of cave painting at Altamira and Lascaux, over seventeen thousand years ago. We no longer know what stories the pictures on those walls were meant to illustrate, but we can try to imagine, even now.1Images speak a different language from words. They tell stories differently. Yet, for many generations, since art history was (...)
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  27.  9
    Painted Decoration on the Floors of Bronze Age Structures on Crete and the Greek Mainland. [REVIEW]Sinclair Hood - 1979 - The Classical Review 29 (2):330-331.
  28.  45
    Allegory and Symbolism in Italian Renaissance Painting.Mikhail Vladimirovitch Alpatov & Sally Bradshaw - 1971 - Diogenes 19 (76):1-25.
  29.  40
    Beyond the Atrium to Ariadne: Erotic Painting and Visual Pleasure in the Roman House.David Fredrick - 1995 - Classical Antiquity 14 (2):266-288.
    Wallace-Hadrill's reading of spatial hierarchy does not address the representation of gender in mythological paintings. However, a rough survey indicates that the majority are erotic and/or violent. Erotic depictions common on household items suggest that the Romans were sensitive to this content; the likely use of pattern books in selecting programs for domestic decoration suggests a synoptic awareness of it. This points to the applicability of contemporary theories of representation and power, and Mulvey's model of visual pleasure in narrative film (...)
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  30.  45
    The painted decoration of rubens's house.Elizabeth McGrath - 1978 - Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 41 (1):245-277.
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  31.  6
    Fashioning modernism: Rose piper’s painting and fabric design.Saul Nelson - 2022 - Angelaki 27 (3-4):125-142.
    This essay asks why modernist art history has been unable to account for the career of the African American painter Rose Piper. One of the most gifted painters of her generation, Piper was also amo...
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  32. Representation and Sensation—A Defence of Deleuze’s Philosophy of Painting.Henry Somers-Hall - 2016 - Journal of Aesthetics and Phenomenology 3 (1):55-65.
    Deleuze’s philosophy of painting can be seen to pose certain challenges to a phenomenological approach to philosophy. While a phenomenological response to Deleuze’s philosophy is clearly needed, I show in this article how an approach taken in a recent paper by Christian Lotz proves inadequate. Lotz argues that through Deleuze’s refusal to accept the place of representation in art, he is unable to distinguish art from decoration, or to give a coherent account of how the content of art can (...)
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  33.  22
    Painting Ethics: Death, Love, and Moral Vision in the Mahāparinibbāna.Anne Ruth Hansen - 2016 - Journal of Religious Ethics 44 (1):17-50.
    This essay draws on Kenneth George's ethnographic study of the Indonesian painter Abdul Djalil Pirous and his art, as well as Pirous's own characterizations of his paintings as “spiritual notes,” to theorize and examine how paintings serve as ethical media. The essay offers a provisional definition of and methodology for “visual ethics” and considers how pictures and language can function quite differently as sites for ethical reflection. The particular painting analyzed here is a large temple mural of the (...)
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  34.  14
    Christianity, Idolatry, and the Question of Jewish Figural Painting in the Middle Ages.Katrin Kogman-Appel - 2009 - Speculum 84 (1):73.
    In 1233 a certain R. Joseph bar Moses of Würzburg commissioned an illuminated copy of Rashi's Bible commentary, now in Munich. After the text was finished, the task of illuminating was put into the hands of a Christian painter, apparently a man named Heinrich, who kept a lay workshop in Würzburg . Three years later a giant Bible, now in Milan, was commissioned perhaps by the same patron, but not necessarily in the same city . It, too, was illuminated; this (...)
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  35.  6
    Painting, Ethics, and Aesthetics in Rome.Nathaniel B. Jones - 2019 - Cambridge University Press.
    In the first centuries BCE and CE, Roman wall painters frequently placed representations of works of art, especially panel paintings, within their own mural compositions. Nathaniel B. Jones argues that the depiction of panel painting within mural ensembles functioned as a meta-pictorial reflection on the practice and status of painting itself. This phenomenon provides crucial visual evidence for both the reception of Greek culture and the interconnected ethical and aesthetic values of art in the Roman world. (...)
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  36.  23
    David Summers. Vision, Reflection, and Desire in Western Painting. 232 pp., illus., bibl., index. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2007. $39.95 . Samuel Y. Edgerton. The Mirror, the Window, and the Telescope: How Renaissance Linear Perspective Changed Our Vision of the Universe. xvi + 199 pp., illus., bibl., index. Ithaca, N.Y./London: Cornell University Press, 2009. $19.95. [REVIEW]Alexander Marr - 2011 - Isis 102 (1):160-162.
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  37.  67
    Metaphor and the making of sense: The contemporary metaphor renaissance.William Franke - 2000 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 33 (2):137-153.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Philosophy and Rhetoric 33.2 (2000) 137-153 [Access article in PDF] Metaphor and the Making of Sense: The Contemporary Metaphor Renaissance William Franke Metaphor has gained a new lease on life through the revival of rhetoric in recent decades. For promoters of "la nouvelle rhétorique," such as Gérard Genette and Roland Barthes, rhetoric came to coincide with a total science of language that is practically coextensive with all social (...)
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  38.  9
    The Painted Fly and the Connoisseur in Eighteenth-Century British Literature.Robert G. Walker - 2023 - Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 86 (1):347-354.
    The ‘musca depicta’ trope is well known to art historians, with a history going back to Pliny. It flourished in the Renaissance, but in eighteenth-century England the meaning of the trope was altered greatly when employed in popular culture, both in live theatrical presentations (by George Alexander Stevens) and in published poetry (by James Robertson, comedian of York). Originally, the trope signalled the virtuosity of the painter, who was able to fool the eye by depicting flies so real that (...)
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  39.  15
    Seeing cultural conflicts.David Carrier - 2005 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 39 (3):115-120.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:The Journal of Aesthetic Education 39.3 (2005) 115-120 [Access article in PDF] Commentary Seeing Cultural Conflicts Some years ago the great intellectual historian Isaiah Berlin made an important statement about what has become known as multiculturalism: We are urged to look upon life as affording a plurality of values, equally genuine, equally ultimate, above all equally objective; incapable, therefore, of being ordered in a timeless hierarchy, or judged in (...)
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  40.  35
    White Fear in Universities: The Story of an Assata Shakur Mural.Susannah Bartlow - 2015 - Feminist Studies 41 (3):689.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Feminist Studies 41, no. 3. © 2015 by Feminist Studies, Inc. 689 Susannah Bartlow White Fear in Universities: The Story of an Assata Shakur Mural No one is going to give you the education you need to overthrow them. No one will teach you your true history, teach you your true heroes if they know that knowledge will set you free. Theory without practice is just as incomplete (...)
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  41.  43
    The Melancholy Assemblage: Affect and Epistemology in the English Renaissance.Drew Daniel - 2013 - Fordham University Press.
    Placing readings of early modern painting and literature in conversation with psychoanalytic theory and assemblage theory, this book argues that, far from isolating its sufferers, melancholy brings people together.
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  42.  29
    Anne Dunlop, Painted Palaces: The Rise of Secular Art in Early Renaissance Italy. University Park, Pa.: Pennsylvania State University Press, 2009. Pp. xix, 319; color frontispiece and 200 black-and-white and color figures. $80. [REVIEW]Jacqueline Marie Musacchio - 2010 - Speculum 85 (3):664-666.
  43.  5
    Between Kherson and Rome. A Survey of Wall Paintings in the Church of St Clement in Stará Boleslav.Jan Dienstbier, Jan Klípa & Adam Pokorný - 2023 - Convivium 10 (2):107-123.
    Comparative study of wall paintings in churches dedicated to St Clement in Stará Boleslav and Rome reveals the wide international networking of contemporary agents in artistic transfer. The importance of late twelfth-century wall paintings in St Clement’s in Stará Boleslav – among Bohemia’s foremost medieval monuments – is underscored by their close proximity to the place of the martyrdom and the center of the cult of the country’s patron, St Wenceslas. The Bohemian church’s consecration echoes the Cyril and Methodius mission, (...)
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  44.  4
    This is not just a painting: an inquiry into art, domination, magic and the sacred.Bernard Lahire - 2019 - Medford, MA: Polity. Edited by Bernard Lahire.
    In 2008, the Musée des Beaux-Arts de Lyon acquired a painting called The Flight into Egypt which was attributed to the French artist Nicolas Poussin. Thought to have been painted in 1657, the painting had gone missing for more than three centuries. Several versions were rediscovered in the 1980s and one was passed from hand to hand, from a family who had no idea of its value to gallery owners and eventually to the museum. A painting that (...)
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  45.  25
    Renaissance Madonnas and the Fantasies of Freud.Mary Bittner Wiseman - 1993 - Hypatia 8 (3):115 - 135.
    Through the work of Julia Kristeva, this paper challenges Freud's laws that everyone is always already gendered, that the mother is feminine and every infant masculine, and that one cannot love the same (gender). The figure of the Madonna, seen through the paintings of Giovanni Bellini, is used to theorize the time in the life of a child before Oedipus and to undo the conceptual knot with which Freud has bound the feminine to the maternal.
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  46.  7
    Public and domestic space. Women’s representation in venetian painting.Fabien Lacouture - 2012 - Clio 36:235-257.
    Contrairement à ce qu’ont affirmé un certain nombre d’historiens et d’historiennes, les femmes ont une place dans l’espace social vénitien aux xve et xvie siècles. Elles appartiennent à l’espace domestique, mais elles sont aussi présentes à l’extérieur, dans les rues et sur les places. Cette étude s’appuie sur des sources picturales pour discuter la présence féminine dans l’espace extérieur et l’espace domestique vénitiens. Peintes par des artistes masculins, elles sont représentées selon des codes bien précis dans l’espace extérieur, souvent à (...)
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  47.  25
    Putting the "Pain" In Painting: A Conceptualization and Consideration of Serious Art.J. Ryan Napier - 2014 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 48 (1):45-53.
    In the year of our Lord 1862, Polish painter Jan Matejko finished his first famous work, Stańczyk, fully translated into English as “Stańczyk during a ball at the court of Queen Bona in the face of the loss of Smolensk.”1 The piece was painted in oils and depicts a famous political figure of Renaissance Poland, Stańczyk the court jester. Stańczyk, an influential figure of Polish history who was as much a political philosopher as a funny man, is depicted in (...)
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  48.  19
    Studies of Italian Renaissance SculptureGerman Painting, XIV-XVI Centuries.Wolfgang Stechow, W. R. Valentiner & Alfred Stange - 1952 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 10 (3):287.
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  49.  9
    Décors peints au plafond dans des maisons hellénistiques à Délos.Françoise Alabe - 2002 - Bulletin de Correspondance Hellénique 126 (1):231-263.
    Fragments of painted plaster found in the destruction layer of three first floor rooms in the House of Seals and of one first floor room of the House of the Sword had broken from the ceiling. They allow the restoration of the schema in the room of the House of the Sword and of two of the rooms in the House of Seals, the latter in colour. Composed of bands surrounding a quadrangular field, these décorations, evoking carpets stretched on the (...)
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  50.  9
    The Painting "Confessions" of Nikolay Raynov.Yvanka B. Raynova - 2018 - Labyrinth: An International Journal for Philosophy, Value Theory and Sociocultural Hermeneutics 20 (2):201-208.
    The aim of the following paper is to show that it is not possible to penetrate into the depths of Nikolay Raynov's universe and to comprehend its wholeness, without posing and investigating the question about the origin or the foundation of his various creative occupations, i.e his novels, philosophic and theosophic writings, art history and critique, paintings, decorative design etc. This question is far too complex to be answered briefly without being simplified, and therefore two main directions will be articulated: (...)
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