Tales of the City XVI a Nyderlandų piešiniai  Bosch ir Bruegel
Tales of the City: Drawing in the Netherlands from Bosch to Bruegel
258,00  Original price was: 258,00 €.129,00 Current price is: 129,00 €. su PVM Į krepšelį
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Tales of the City: Drawing in the Netherlands from Bosch to Bruegel

Original price was: 258,00 €.Current price is: 129,00 €. su PVM

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An innovative examination of sixteenth-century Netherlandish drawing against the backdrop of the urban economic boom, the Protestant Reformation, and the Eighty Years’ War
An innovative examination of sixteenth-century Netherlandish drawing against the backdrop of the urban economic boom, the Protestant Reformation, and the Eighty Years’ War Featuring works by Hieronymus Bosch (c. 1450–1516), Jan Gossaert (c. 1478–1532), Maarten van Heemskerck (1498–1574), Pieter Bruegel the Elder (c. 1525–1569), Hendrick Goltzius (1558–1617), and others, this book positions drawing in the Low Countries in the sixteenth century as a dynamic, multifaceted practice. Drawings played roles as varied as the artists who made them: they were designs for prints, paintings, stained glass windows, decorative objects, and tapestries, as well as tools for presentation, translation, and the display of knowledge and virtuosity. The artists’ diversified urban communities shaped their drawing practices, as did shifting cultural and political circumstances surrounding Protestant Reform and the Eighty Years’ War. In addition to the book’s four illuminating essays, many of the more than eighty catalogue entries—selected from the holdings of The Albertina Museum and the Cleveland Museum of Art—present new research.

Daugiau prekių iš šios kategorijos

  • Context of Sixteenth-Century Netherlandish Drawing: The book examines Dutch drawings in the 1500s within the broader context of economic growth, the Protestant Reformation, and the Eighty Years’ War.

What is the main focus of the book on sixteenth-century Netherlandish drawing?

The book provides an innovative examination of sixteenth-century Netherlandish drawing, positioning it within the context of the urban economic boom, the Protestant Reformation, and the Eighty Years’ War, highlighting the multifaceted roles of drawings by various artists.