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.
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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.)
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 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)
Stained Glass before 1700 in the Philadelphia Museum of Art
Burnham R.
Harvey Miller Publishers
English Text.
London, 2013; pp. 432, cm 23x32.
series: Corpus Vitrearum USA (HMCV 6)
ISBN: 1-872501-19-2 - EAN13: 9781872501192
Subject: Glass
Period: 1000-1400 (XII-XIV) Middle Ages,1400-1800 (XV-XVIII) Renaissance
Languages:
Weight: 2.45 kg
The present volume, Part VI/1 of the series Corpus Vitrearum USA, illustrates and catalogues in great detail the entire holdings of more than 140 stained glass panels now in the Philadelphia Museum of Art. The collection is wide-ranging in both date and origin of production : it includes panels of high quality from the early thirteenth to the seventeenth century, and from a number of different countries and regions. Pride of place among the items catalogued are the large-scale ecclesiastical windows from France, the most precious of which are the three stained glass medallions commissioned in mid-thirteenth century by Louis IX for his palace chapel in Paris, the Sainte-Chapelle. Of equal importance is the holding of English armorial glass, considered to be the most extensive collection in the United States, while from the North and South Lowlands, the museum also owns an interesting group of unipartite glass panels.
The author, Dr Renée Burnam, provides an exceptionally detailed and well-researched catalogue entry for each panel, and gives not only a full description of its iconography, style, technique and condition, but introduces every item with a lengthy account of the history of the glass, enlivening her text with a wealth of comparative illustrations. In addition to the main body of the catalogue, Dr Burnam also provides shorter descriptions of the figural glass acquired by the museum in 1945 from the estate of George Gray Barnard and of a group of composite heraldic glass, either altered or dated after 1700; and finally she includes entries for further unipartite panels either damaged, fragmented or dated post-1700. Furthermore there is a most interesting and useful Appendix listing de-accessioned glass that had been acquired earlier in the museum's history.
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