Librairie Renouard, H. Laurens, 1939, 160 p., grand in-8 br., coll. " Les Villes d'Art célèbres", illustré de 117 gravures, sou papier cristal, très bon état
Reference : QWA-2868
Librairie de la Garenne
M Christian Boyer
01 42 70 11 98
Vente par correspondance uniquement. Conformes aux usages de la librairie ancienne et moderne. Les prix indiqués sont nets. Les frais de port sont en sus. Les livres peuvent être commandés ou réservés par téléphone, courrier ou courriel. Paiement par chèque ou virement
Turnhout, Brepols, :2025 Linnen binding under illustrated dustjacket, vii + 458 pages, 216 x 280 mm, Illustrations:2 b/w, 122 col., 1 tables b/w., 7 maps color. ENG. *NEW. ISBN 9782503618395.
The patrons of civic group portraits were corporate organisations such as confraternities, craft and militia guilds, charitable institutions, and administrative bodies. Up until now, the painted civic group has been primarily seen as a product of the Dutch Republic. While the genre may have been exceptionally important in the Northern Low Countries, the present study shows that such paintings were also fundamental in the South, with Bruges playing a central role. From the late fifteenth century until 1800, both the urban elite and the artisan classes of Bruges commissioned institutional group portraits, and the forms that those artworks took responded to local conditions and needs. The patrons? self-representation in these works was meant to emphasize the internal cohesion and solidarity within their group, and to reinforce that group?s social status in the urban community. In looking carefully at these contexts, this research project has provided new interpretations for civic group portraits and has demonstrated their richness as both cultural heritage and historical sources. The Bruges works, however, represent just a portion of those produced in the Southern Netherlands during the early modern era. The author provides an updated inventory of 190 civic group portraits that he has been able to trace for the Southern Netherlands. All of these works, moreover, need to be set in a broader European context, as civic group portraits are also recorded in Venice, Paris, and England, and were likely produced elsewhere as well. Future researchers will be able to expand our understanding of the genre as a European phenomenon, continuing to reveal the significance of these remarkable artworks and use them to gain deeper insights into the past. TABLE OF CONTENTS Preface Bruges: An Urban History Chapter 1: Design and Methodology Chapter 2: Early Civic Group Portraits in Bruges, Before 1560 Chapter 3: Civic Group Portraits in Bruges, c. 1560?1650 Chapter 4: Civic Group Portraits in Bruges, 1650?1800 Chapter 5: Civic Group Portraits from Bruges in a Southern Low Countries Context, 1450?1800: A status quaestionis Conclusion Addendum: Civic Group Portraits in the Southern Netherlands, 1450?1800 Notes List of Illustrations Illustrations Photo Credits Bibliography Index
(1) Brugge, Imprimerie Houdmont, 1880, in-8°, 12 pp . (2) Bruges, Imprimerie Graphica, s.d. (no author), 14 pp. (3) Bruges, Imprimerie Jean Cuypers, 1882, 46 pp. Bound in blue cloth, leather label on spine, wrappers of (1) and (3) preserved. Rare convolute of three pamphlets or studies on the port of Bruges ( Zeebruges ). The second pamphlet not in De Le Court.
Artis-Historia, collection "Cités de Belgique", Bruxelles, 1980. Grand in-8, cartonnage éditeur illustré en couleurs, 126 pp. Bruges : Deux mille ans d'histoire. - Les riches heures de Bruges. - Pedro de Bayona devient bourgeois de Bruges. - Lettres de Paul à Sophie - Légendes de Bruges : L'ours blanc de Bruges. - Le miracle de la ...
Avec 75 illustrations contrecollées en couleurs in et hors-texte. --- Plus d'informations sur le site archivesdunord.com
Phone number : 01 42 73 13 41
Reference : albb2121088c42c38cd
Bruges and Europe Bruges and Europe. In English /Bruges and Europe Bryugge i Evropa. Antwerp Fonds Mercator 1992, 440 p. We have thousands of titles and often several copies of each title may be available. Please feel free to contact us for a detailed description of the copies available. SKUalbb2121088c42c38cd.
, Brepols, Paperback, V+221 pages ., 210 x 297 mm, 1995. ISBN 9782503504445.
An interdisciplinary approach to the works of Petrus Christus incorporating the papers of the 1994 Petrus Christus Symposium at The Metropolitan Museum in New York. During the past few decades, admirers of Petrus Christus have been astonishingly fortunate. Unknown or forgotten paintings in the style of Christus have turned up with surprising regularity: in the 1950s, the wonderful Kansas City Holy Family; in the 1960s the Birmingham Christ and the Bruges Isabella of Portugal Presented by Saint Elisabeth in the 1980s, the Cleveland Baptist and the problematic Bruges panels of the Annunciation and the Nativity. Nothing, of course, can compensate for the loss, during World War II, of the Dessau Crucifixion, and the Berlin wing panels of the Baptist and Saint Catherine. We had to wait until 1974 for the first monograph devoted to Christus, but since then two more books on Christus have been published and important discoveries have been made about his career in Bruges. Thanks to Maryan Ainsworth and her colleagues, we had a truly marvellous exhibition, where we had the privilige of studying more of Chrsitus' paintings than he himself can ever have seen gathered in one place. The exhibition itself initiated a new phase in Christus studies and it is the ideal beginning. If problems of attribution and chronology are ever to be settled, they had to be settled during the exhibition. This publication offers the papers of the 1994 Petrus Christus Symposium at The Metropolitan Museum in New York. L. Campbell, Approaches to Petrus Christus, W. Blockmans, The Creative Environment: Inventions and Functions of Bruges Art Production, C. Harbison, Fact, Symbol, Ideal, Roles for Realism in Early Netherlandish Painting, G.B. Canfield, The Reception of Flemish Art in Renaissance Florence and Naples, M.P.J. Martens, Discussion, J. Upton, PETRUS.XPI.ME.FECIT, The Transformation of a Legacy, S. Buck, Petrus Christus' Berlin Wings and the Metropolitan Museum's Eyckian Diptych, S. Jones, The Virgin of Nicholas van Maelbeke and the Followers of Jan Van Eyck, C. Eisler, Discussion, L. Gellman, Two Lost Portraits by Petrus Christus.