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The Connoisseur (Sir Gerald Ryan
1 TheConnoisseur An Illustrated Magazine For Collectors Edited by C. Reginald Grundy Vol. LIX. (JANUARY—APRIL. 1921) LONDON Published by the Proprietor, W. CLAUDE JOHNSON, at tiii., Editorial and Advertisement Okkices of The Connoisskuu, AT I, Duke Street, St. James's, S.W. i 192 1 MROSE AND SONS 1 DERIIY AND I.ONDO 8(i 1)656 NDEX ARTICLES AND NOTES A Beautiful Jacobean Hanging (Note) .Authors and Contributors—coiilinucd. "A Citv Banquet," by Fred Roc, K.I., R.B.C. Richardson, Mrs. Herbert. The Fashion Plates '(Note) of Horace Vernet (Art.) ... ... ... yy Adam and other Furniture (Note) ... Roberts, C. Clifton. Salopian China (Art.) ... 2.( Aitken, John E., Drawings by (Note) Roe. F. Gordon. The Life and Work of F. W. An Outpost of London, by Criticus (Note) Hayes, A.R.C.A., F.R.G.S. (Art.) 103 Angelica Kautfmann and Her .Art. by Lady Victoria Rusconi, Art. Jahn. The Tapestries of Mantua Manners (.\rt.) by Raphael (Art.) 77 Another New Gallery (Note) Williamson, Dr. G. C. Some Notes on the Portraits of Sir Pliilip Sidney (Art) ... Antique Business Extension (Note) 217 Antiques at Waring's (Note) Books Reviewed. Aquatints. Old (Note) A Bookseller's igo Authors and Contributor.s. Catalogue " A Catalogue of Etchings by Augustus John, Andrews, Cyril Bruyn. The Valencia Altar-piece 1901-1914." by Campbell Dodgson ... 5S (Art.) " A Dweller in Mcsnpntamia," by Donald Maxwell 1S7 Brochner, Georg. Old Danish Furniture (.Art.)... " A Hamll.".i. ..I Imlini Art," by E. B. Havell ... 188 Brockwell. Maurice W. Frans Hals Pictures at " Haarlem (Note) A Histiii\ <\ I \ri\,l,iy Things in England," by M. -
Full Circel Abstract List
T HE F RICK C OLLECTION FULL CIRCLE THE MEDAL IN ART HISTORY A Symposium in Honor of Stephen K. Scher FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 2017 Music Room | 11:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Attendance is free with online registration. Abstracts Making Prints, Making Medals Susan Dackerman, Visiting Scholar, Getty Research Institute This paper explores resonances between printmaking and medal making in early sixteenth-century Germany. As multiples, they share methods of propagation from matrices (dies, molds, casts, woodblocks, copperplates, etc.) usually comprised of materials (stone, wood, copper) different from their final form (paper and metal). In almost all cases, their manufacture is the result of pressure. What does it mean to make meaning through impression? ‘Inventing’ Identity: Medals and Heroic Portraits in the Italian Renaissance Ilaria Bernocchi, Doctoral Candidate, University of Cambridge Presenting a range of examples, including works by Leone Leoni and Agnolo Bronzino, this paper explores how medals and heroic portraits, in which the sitter is in the guise of a god or a saint, reflected the Renaissance investigation of the layered nature of identity. Artists and patrons staged public ambitions, social status, and intellectual and ethical concerns through visual metaphors in various media. T HE FRICK C OLLECTION 1 East 70th Street New York, NY 10021 Michelangelo’s Portrait Medal: The Penitent Artist in His Final Years Emily Fenichel, Assistant Professor, Florida Atlantic University The interpretation of Leone Leoni’s portrait medal of Michelangelo has been the subject of great debate. This paper argues that Michelangelo exploited the singular qualities of portrait medals to help craft an object that spoke to his situation as an aged artist navigating the Counter-Reformation and, as such, offers one approach to understanding his late period. -
University of Copenhagen
The Flavian Isea in Beneventum and Rome The appropriation of Egyptian and Egyptianising Art in imperial Beneventum and Rome Clausen, Kristine Bülow Publication date: 2015 Document version Early version, also known as pre-print Document license: CC BY-NC-ND Citation for published version (APA): Clausen, K. B. (2015). The Flavian Isea in Beneventum and Rome: The appropriation of Egyptian and Egyptianising Art in imperial Beneventum and Rome. Det Humanistiske Fakultet, Københavns Universitet. Download date: 08. Apr. 2020 FACULTY OF HUMANITIES UNIVERSITY OF COPENHAGEN PhD thesis Kristine Bülow Clausen The Flavian Isea in Beneventum and Rome The appropriation of Egyptian and Egyptianising Art in imperial Beneventum and Rome Academic advisors: Annette Rathje and Jane Fejfer Submitted: 26/08/14 SAXO Institute. Department of Classical Archaeology. Author: Kristine Bülow Clausen. The Flavian Isea in Beneventum and Rome. The appropriation of Egyptian and Egyptianising Art in imperial Beneventum and Rome. Academic advisors: Annette Rathje and Jane Fejfer. Cover: Iseum Campense: Relief fragment with the profile of a male head, SAR, deposito San Macuto. Cleopatra Roma , 2000, 264, IV.48. Submitted: 26.08.2014. Contents Acknowledgements ........................................................................................................................... 3 The structure .................................................................................................................................................... 3 1. Introduction ................................................................................................................................. -
Profiling Women in Sixteenth-Century Italian
BEAUTY, POWER, PROPAGANDA, AND CELEBRATION: PROFILING WOMEN IN SIXTEENTH-CENTURY ITALIAN COMMEMORATIVE MEDALS by CHRISTINE CHIORIAN WOLKEN Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements For the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Dissertation Advisor: Dr. Edward Olszewski Department of Art History CASE WESTERN RESERVE UNIVERISTY August, 2012 CASE WESTERN RESERVE UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF GRADUATE STUDIES We hereby approve the thesis/dissertation of Christine Chiorian Wolken _______________________________________________________ Doctor of Philosophy Candidate for the __________________________________________ degree*. Edward J. Olszewski (signed) _________________________________________________________ (Chair of the Committee) Catherine Scallen __________________________________________________________________ Jon Seydl __________________________________________________________________ Holly Witchey __________________________________________________________________ April 2, 2012 (date)_______________________ *We also certify that written approval has been obtained for any proprietary material contained therein. 1 To my children, Sofia, Juliet, and Edward 2 Table of Contents List of Images ……………………………………………………………………..….4 Acknowledgements……………………………………………………………...…..12 Abstract……………………………………………………………………………...15 Introduction…………………………………………………………………………16 Chapter 1: Situating Sixteenth-Century Medals of Women: the history, production techniques and stylistic developments in the medal………...44 Chapter 2: Expressing the Link between Beauty and -
Power and Nostalgia in Eras of Cultural Rebirth: the Timeless
Claremont Colleges Scholarship @ Claremont Scripps Senior Theses Scripps Student Scholarship 2013 Power and Nostalgia in Eras of Cultural Rebirth: The imelesT s Allure of the Farnese Antinous Kathleen LaManna Scripps College Recommended Citation LaManna, Kathleen, "Power and Nostalgia in Eras of Cultural Rebirth: The imeT less Allure of the Farnese Antinous" (2013). Scripps Senior Theses. Paper 176. http://scholarship.claremont.edu/scripps_theses/176 This Open Access Senior Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Scripps Student Scholarship at Scholarship @ Claremont. It has been accepted for inclusion in Scripps Senior Theses by an authorized administrator of Scholarship @ Claremont. For more information, please contact [email protected]. POWER AND NOSTALGIA IN ERAS OF CULTURAL REBIRTH: THE TIMELESS ALLURE OF THE FARNESE ANTINOUS by KATHLEEN ROSE LaMANNA SUBMITTED TO SCRIPPS COLLEGE IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE DEGREE OF BACHELOR OF ARTS PROFESSOR MICHELLE BERENFELD PROFESSOR GEORGE GORSE MAY 3, 2013 Acknowledgements To Professor Rankaitis for making sure I could attend the college of my dreams and for everything else. I owe you so much. To Professor Novy for encouraging me to pursue writing. Your class changed my life. Don’t stop rockin! To Professor Emerick for telling me to be an Art History major. To Professor Pohl for your kind words of encouragement, three great semesters, and for being the only person in the world who might love Gladiator more than I do! To Professor Coats for being a great advisor and always being around to sign my many petition forms and for allowing me to pursue a degree with honors. -
Barbarigo' by Titian in the National Gallery, London
MA.JAN.MAZZOTTA.pg.proof.corrs_Layout 1 08/12/2011 15:31 Page 12 A ‘gentiluomo da Ca’ Barbarigo’ by Titian in the National Gallery, London by ANTONIO MAZZOTTA ‘AT THE TIME he first began to paint like Giorgione, when he was no more than eighteen, [Titian] made the portrait of a gen- tleman of the Barbarigo family, a friend of his, which was held to be extremely fine, for the representation of the flesh-colour was true and realistic and the hairs were so well distinguished one from the other that they might have been counted, as might the stitches in a doublet of silvered satin which also appeared in that work. In short the picture was thought to show great diligence and to be very successful. Titian signed it in the shadow, but if he had not done so, it would have been taken for Giorgione’s work. Meanwhile, after Giorgione himself had executed the principal façade of the Fondaco de’ Tedeschi, Titian, through Barbarigo’s intervention, was commissioned to paint certain scenes for the same building, above the Merceria’.1 Vasari’s evocative and detailed description, which would seem to be the result of seeing the painting in the flesh, led Jean Paul Richter in 1895 to believe that it could be identified with Titian’s Portrait of a man then in the collection of the Earl of Darnley at Cobham Hall and now in the National Gallery, London (Fig.15).2 Up to that date it was famous as ‘Titian’s Ariosto’, a confusion that, as we shall see, had been born in the seventeenth century. -
Pappot Wiersma Jonghelinck TEXT FIGURES And
Jacques Jonghelinck (1530-1606), bronze sculptor of the Low Countries in the 16th century Arie Pappot and Lisa Wiersma Abstract Today, the sculptural oeuvre of Jacques Jonghelinck (1530-1606) is scattered over the world, and has not received much technical attention. A comparison between his works and that of Leone and Pompeo Leoni (1509-1590 and 1533-1608) tells us more about the impact of Italian bronze sculpture on the techniques of Netherlandish workshops, and helps determine the characteristics of Jonghelinck's bronzes. In both workshop practice and his use of materials, Jonghelinck clearly followed his Milanese employer. Alas, not that many monumental sculptures left the artist's workshop, but the pieces that did demonstrate his artistic resourcefulness. In this paper, particular attention is paid to the Planet Series to support this statement. Additionally, we argue that the artist might have been trained by an Augsburg master, as a result of which he would have become the perfect Renaissance bronze sculptor with an outstanding background in goldsmithing. Introduction Jacques Jonghelinck was one of many Netherlandish artists of his generation who spent time in Italy.1 He was born and raised in Antwerp, worked in the Leoni workshop in Milan around 1552, and settled in Brussels and later in Antwerp as a court sculptor, medallist and mint master. Few examples of monumental metal sculpture are known from the Low Countries in the first half of the 16th century, the period preceding Jonghelinck's career. The flourishing production of sculptures in brass - including, for instance, the late gothic Mary of Burgundy in Bruges – declined. -
Strategic Plan 2016 2019 National Archaeological Museum of Naples
strategic plan 2016 2019 national archaeological museum of naples Piazza Museo 19, 80135, Napoli, Italy t +39 081 4422203 • f +39 081 440013 [email protected] www.museoarcheologiconapoli.it follow the Museum on strategic plan 2016 2019 national archaeological museum of naples introduction MANN at a glance the museum history and identity structures and building today human capital mission the collections 7 resources our online presence governance internal regulation #accessibility the museum’s #observing values #listening 39 #connecting #transparency #sustainability vision MANN in strategic objectives the future building and collections financial resources services audience development 59 digital solutions introduction In this document, we have set out the main areas for The structure and content of the Strategic Plan were development at the National Archaeological Museum elaborated with the continuous support of Professor of Naples (MANN) over the next four years. Ludovico Solima, who teaches Management for Cultural Enterprises in the Department of Economics The importance of our Strategic Plan is linked to our at the Second University of Naples. The final document need to plan forwards very carefully when embarking is also the outcome of a careful review of the upon the many operations that we intend to carry out bibliographical works elaborated by the international at MANN between 2016 and 2019. It is, therefore, community on this topic, alongside the scrupulous a programming tool that is intrinsically linked to analysis of similar documents drawn up by other the identity and history of the museum, and so will museums abroad. contribute towards outlining our vision of what MANN will be by the end of my tenure. -
Leonardo Da Vinci's Anatomical Drawings and Juan De Arfe Y Villafañe
ARCHIVO ESPAÑOL DE ARTE, LXXXVII, 346 ABRIL-JUNIO 2014, pp. 139-156 ISSN: 0004-0428, eISSN: 1988-8511 doi: 10.3989/aearte.2014.10 LEONARDO DA VINCI’S ANATOMICAL DRAWINGS AND JUAN DE ARFE Y VILLAFAÑE BORIS RÖHRL University of Applied Sciences RheinMain, Wiesbaden, Germany The four volumes of the Varia commensuración para la escultura y architectura (1585–87) of the Spanish silversmith and sculptor Juan de Arfe y Villafañe represent an extensive compilation of Italian art techniques of the Renaissance. The sources for the Libro segundo, which includes systematic explanations on the theory of proportions, the skeleton and musculature have yet to be discovered. Its didactic and illus- trative structure is unique in the context of sixteenth-century literature. The general layout and some details of the illustrations of the first three chapters seem to be derived from the Windsor convolute of anatomical drawings by Leonardo da Vinci. Key words: Anatomical drawings; Artistic anatomy; Leonardo da Vinci; Juan de Arfe y Villafañe; Didactic literature of the Renaissance. DIBUJOS ANATÓMICOS DE LEONARDO DA VINCI Y JUAN DE ARFE Y VILLAFAÑE Los cuatros libros de Varia commensuración para la escultura y architectura (1585-1587) del platero y escultor Juan de Arfe y Villafañe representan un extenso compendio de las teorías y técnicas del Renaci- miento italiano. Las fuentes del Libro segundo, que contiene explicaciones sistemáticas sobre la proporción de la figura humana, el esqueleto y la musculatura, aún no han sido descubiertas. La estructura didáctica y las ilustraciones son únicas en el contexto de la literatura del siglo XVI. El formato general y algunos detalles de las ilustraciones de los primeros tres capítulos parecen tener su origen en los dibujos anatómicos de Leonardo da Vinci conservados en el castillo de Windsor. -
El Retablo Mayor De La Ballica
El retablo mayor de la ballica I. Antecedentes. 1.1. Preliminares. 1.2. El contrato y sus vicisitudes. La escritura de obligación de 1580. 1.3. La contratación de oficiales. II. La obra. 2.1. La custodia. 2.2. Las figuras del tabernáculo y del retablo. 2.3. Estudio estilístico y sus fuentes artísticas. 2.4. Técnica escultórica. I. ANTECEDENTES 1.1. Preliminares Desde mediados del siglo XVI, los Leoni, León padre y Pompeo hijo, trabajaron para la Corte española. Pompeo se traslada a Espa- fia en el séquito del Emperador el año de 1556 al cuidado de la mo- numental serie de retratos reales en bronce y mármol que, obra en su mayoría de León, se ocupa de reparar y retocar, firmando junto a su padre el año de 1564 los realizados en bronce. La actividad en España de Pompeo se desglosa de la de su padre, con el que vuelve a trabajar desde el año de 1579 en el encargo del gran retablo del Escorial, confirmación de su crédito como escultor en nuestras tie- rras . Felipe II había emprendido la gran obra del Monasterio escuria- lense unos años antes, 1563, y como se lee en los historiadores de la época, en ella volcaba sus iniciativas artísticas al servicio de las cuales se trabajaba en todos sus vastos dominios. Lógicamente, la iglesia y su decoración constituyeron sus metas más ambiciosas. La construcción arquitectónica a cargo del arquitecto real no se ocupó 1 . PLON, E., Leon Leoni et Pompeo Leoni, París 1857. IDEm, Les maitres ita- liens au senice de la maison d'Autriche. -
Press Release
PRESS Press Contact Rachel Eggers Associate Director of Public Relations [email protected] RELEASE 206.654.3151 AUGUST 19, 2019 FLESH AND BLOOD: ITALIAN MASTERPIECES FROM THE CAPODIMONTE MUSEUM OPENS AT SEATTLE ART MUSEUM OCTOBER 17, 2019 Rare opportunity to see major artworks by Artemisia Gentileschi, El Greco, Raphael, Jusepe de Ribera, Titian, and more SEATTLE, WA – The Seattle Art Museum presents Flesh and Blood: Italian Masterpieces from the Capodimonte Museum (October 17, 2019–January 26, 2020), featuring 40 Renaissance and Baroque works of art (39 paintings and one sculpture) drawn from the collection of one of the largest museums in Italy. Traveling from the Museo e Real Bosco di Capodimonte in Naples, the exhibition offers a rare opportunity to see works by significant Italian, French, and Spanish artists who worked in Italy including Artemisia Gentileschi, El Greco, Parmigianino, Raphael, Guido Reni, Jusepe de Ribera, Titian, and more. The Capodimonte Museum is a royal palace built in 1738 by Charles of Bourbon, King of Naples and Sicily (later King Charles III of Spain). The core of the collection is the illustrious Farnese collection of antiquities, painting, and sculpture, formed in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries and inherited by Charles of Bourbon. Italian and Spanish masterpieces of the Baroque period, grounded in realism and produced in Naples, build on this foundation. The Farnese collection traces a century of creativity, inspiration, and a constant search for beauty, followed by masterpieces of the Baroque era characterized by grandeur, dramatic realism, and theatricality. This exhibition marks the first time that this many works from the Capodimonte Museum will travel together at the same time. -
Charles V and the Fury at the Prado Museum: the Power of the King's
Mirko VAGNONI, Charles V and the Fury at the Prado Museum: The Power of the King’s Body as Image Charles V and the Fury at the Prado Museum: The Power of the King’s Body as Image Carlos V y la Furia en el Museo del Prado: El poder del cuerpo del rey como imagen Mirko VAGNONI Université de Fribourg [email protected] Recibido: 13/12/2017 Aceptado: 25/01/2018 Abstract: This is the text of the presentation “Charles V and the Fury at the Prado Museum: The Power of the King’s Body as Image” at the International Conference “El poder del la imagen en el Museo del Prado” (Madrid, December 12th-13th, 2017). By analysing the bronze sculpture Charles V and the Fury (Leone and Pompeo Leoni, 1549-1564. Prado Museum, Madrid), this paper aims to underline the necessity to study royal images in their context (with particular attention to their visibility) to understand better their social use and function. This type of methodological approach can be without any doubt very useful for the historiography in the overall analysis of the leader’s portrait and can stimulate new researches for the future and reformulate some of the traditional conceptions on this topic. Key words: Representation of power, Royal portrait, Royal body, Charles V of Habsburg, Leone Leoni, Pompeo Leoni. Resumen: Este es el texto de la ponencia " Charles V and the Fury at the Prado Museum: The Power of the King’s Body as Image ", presentada en el Congreso Internacional "El poder de la imagen en el Museo del Prado" (Madrid, 12 al 13 de diciembre de 2017).