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DEAL OF THE DAY

L'ora dello spettatore. Come le immagini ci usano.

Edited by M. Di Monte and Gennari Santori F.
Roma, 2020; paperback, pp. 264, col. ill., cm 21x27.

cover price: € n.d.

L'ora dello spettatore. Come le immagini ci usano.

Total price: € 40.00 € 147.00 add to cart carrello

Books included in the offer:

L'ora dello spettatore. Come le immagini ci usano.

Edited by M. Di Monte and Gennari Santori F.
Roma, 2020; paperback, pp. 264, col. ill., cm 21x27.

FREE (cover price: € n.d.)

L'ora dello spettatore. Come le immagini ci usano.

Caravaggio. La Bottega del Genio

Roma, Museo Nazionale del Palazzo di Venezia - Sale Quattrocentesche, December 22, 2010 - May 29, 2011.
Edited by Falucci C.
Roma, 2010; paperback, pp. 118, b/w and col. ill., tavv., cm 24x28.
(Cataloghi Mostre. 49).

FREE (cover price: € 48.00)

Caravaggio. La Bottega del Genio

Caravaggio. La Cappella Contarelli

Roma, Palazzo Venezia, March 10 - October 15, 2011.
Edited by M. Cardinali and De Ruggieri M. B.
Roma, 2011; paperback, pp. 150, 60 b/w ill., 60 col. ill., 60 b/w plates, col. plates, cm 24x28.
(Cataloghi Mostre. 50).

FREE (cover price: € 59.00)

Caravaggio. La Cappella Contarelli

chiudi

Cornelis Engebrechtsz (c. 1460-1527). A Sixteenth-Century Leiden Artist and his Workshop

Brepols Publishers

English edition.
English Text.
Turnhout, 2014; clothbound, pp. 318, col. ill., cm 24x30,5.

series: Me Fecit

ISBN: 2-503-54223-9 - EAN13: 9782503542232

Subject: Monographs (Painting and Drawing)

Period: 1400-1800 (XV-XVIII) Renaissance

Places: Europe

Languages:  english text  

Weight: 1.71 kg


Cornelis Engebrechtsz. (c. 1462-1527) was the first major Leiden painter to whom works can be attributed with certainty. These include a Triptych with the Lamentation, dated c. 1508 and a Triptych with the Crucifixion, probably a decade later, both of which were made for the Mariënpoel Convent near Leiden, and which are now in the Museum De Lakenhal in Leiden. These Leiden altarpieces display the influence of the dynamic mannered style and palette of the Antwerp Mannerists, including rather splendid gold brocades. On the basis of the documented works not more as dozen paintings and some fragments can be attributed to the Master himself but many more can be connected to his workshop. This makes it likely that he had a large workshop specializing in devotional works. Engebrechtsz.'s pupils include his three sons. In addition, Engebrechtsz. most likely was the second teacher, around 1508, of Lucas van Leyden and from c. 1515, he trained also Aertgen Claesz., better known as Aertgen van Leyden. Although his pupils, and above all his three sons, must have played an important role in the shop, it has so far proved difficult to associate one or more of them with specific paintings. The question of attributions is further complicated by the large group of paintings formerly attributed to the Antwerp master Jan (Wellensz.) de Cock (c. 1470-1521) and now usually attributed to the sons of Engelbrechtsz's or more generally to his workshop. Using as a point of departure the dissertation by Walter Gibson on Engebrechtsz. and his workshop, published in 1977, the present volume also draws upon the subsequent technical investigations of many of the paintings. The spectacular underdrawing of the paintings revealed with infrared reflectography has given better insights in the working methods of the artist and his workshop, and it is now possible to characterize more clearly Engebrechtsz.'s stylistic development, his workshop production, and the different hands involved.

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