DU ROCHER 1999 275 pages 15 5x23 8x2 7cm. 1999. Broché. 275 pages.
Reference : 500032852
ISBN : 2268031144
Très bon état - légères marques de lecture et/ou de stockage mais du reste en très bon état- expédié soigneusement depuis la France
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Editions du Rocher 1999 275 pages 15x25x2cm. 1999. Broché. 275 pages.
Très Bon Etat de conservation
, Brepols, 2022 Paperback, 291 pages, Size:216 x 280 mm, Illustrations:115 b/w, 25 col., Language: English. ISBN 9782503598017.
Summary The essays collected in this volume are devoted to the Utrecht painter Abraham Bloemaert. The artist has received considerable scholarly attention following the publication of the catalogue raisonn of his paintings and, more recently, of his drawings, particularly in connection with the major exhibition The Bloemaert Effect (2012, Utrecht & Schwerin). This publication examines Abraham Bloemaert as a universal artist while it also aims to better understand his contribution towards the development of new iconographic themes. The choice and execution of specific subjects are considered in light of the local religious context, among others. In order to offer new perspectives and stimulate further research, the volume carefully examines the role of his workshop and the various artistic practices - painting, engraving, and drawing - in which its members engaged under Bloemaert's supervision. A key question ties together the multifaceted approaches presented here: should Bloemaert be considered as the 'father of the Utrecht school' and the founder of a dynasty of artists? TABLE OF CONTENTS Preface ? L onie Marquaille Abraham Bloemaert as a Universal Painter Between Fable and Nature: Abraham Bloemaert in Dutch Seventeenth-Century Art Theory ? Jan Blanc The Tree and the Farmhouse: Bloemaert, Van Mander and the Birth of Dutch Landscape Painting ? Boudewijn Bakker Candlelight, Devotional Meditation, and Artistic Process in Abraham Bloemaert's Supper at Emmaus ? Natasha Seaman 'Niet te verladen': The Manner and Meaning of Abraham Bloemaert and Bo tius Bolswert's Sylva anachoretica of 1619 ? Walter S. Melion Abraham Bloemaert's Workshop and Legacy Abraham Bloemaert: Artistic Strategy and Workshop Production ? Gero Seelig Printmaking in Bloemaert's Workshop in Utrecht. Reconsidering Abraham's Collaboration with his Sons: Cornelis II and Frederick ? L onie Marquaille Cornelis Bloemaert II: Rethinking his Role as Reproductive Engraver ? Erin Downey Late Bloomers: Nicolaes Kn pfer, Jan Baptist Weenix, Jan Both and the Utrecht Workshop of Abraham Bloemaert ? Elizabeth Nogrady 'Son go t de dessein tenoit toujours du pays': Abraham Bloemaert's Graphic Legacy in Eighteenth-Century France ? J. Cabelle Ahn On Attribution Attributing the Adoration of the Shepherds in Antibes Cathedral. A Painting by Abraham Bloemaert's Workshop or his Son Hendrick? ? Olivier Zeder Bibliography Index of Names
Turnhout, Brepols, 1998 Hardback, 208 pages ., 23 x 28 mm. Illustr , Neuf / bon etat Languages : French. ISBN 9782503508115.
R.W. Karrow Jr., 'Abraham Ortelius, une introduction'; Prof. Dr. H. Elkhadem, 'La naissance d'un concept: Le Theatrum Orbis Terrarum d'Ortelius'; P.H. Meurer, 'Abraham Ortelius comme cartographe'; L. Danckaert, 'Coup d'oeuil sur les cartes d'atlas d'Ortelius'; Dr. A. Meskens, 'Le monde sur une surface plane : cartographe mathematique a l'epoque d'Abraham Ortelius'; L. Wellens-De Donder, 'Un atlas historique : le Parergon d'Ortelius'; Dr. G. Mangani, 'La signification providentielle du Theatrum orbis terrarum'; Prof. Dr. J. Romm, 'Mythe, cartes et histoire : l'utilisation par Ortelius de l'Atlantide dans le developpement de la theorie de la derive des continents' ; Drs. J. Depuydt, 'Le cercle d'amis et de correspondants autour d'Abraham Ortelius'; Prof. Dr. H. Meeus, 'Abraham Ortelius et Peeter Heyns'; Prof. Dr. G. Tournoy, 'Abraham Ortelius et la poesie politique de Jacques van Baerle'; N. Buttner, 'Abraham Ortelius comme collectionneur'; C.E. Dekesel, 'Abraham Ortelius : numismate'; D. Imhof, 'Abraham Ortelius et Jean I Moretus : la production et la vente des oeuvres d'Ortelius par l'Officine Plantinienne de 1589 a 1610'; Bibliographie.
Superbe exemplaire conservé dans sa reliure de l’époque en peau de truie estampée à froid sur ais de bois. Basel, H. Petri, 1546. 2 textes en 1 volume in-4 de : I/ (3) ff., (1) f.bl., 351 pp., (1) p. avec la marque ; II/ (4) ff. (sur 5, relié sans le titre latin de la 2e partie), (1) f.bl., 207 pp., (1) p. avec la marque. Hebrew and Roman letters, illustration: woodcut figures and diagrams. Reliure en peau de truie de l’époque estampée à froid sur ais de bois. Les plats sont ornés d’une plaque à froid avec une frise comportant des scènes bibliques en encadrement. Le plat supérieur est monogrammé et daté « I S 1558 ». Dos à nerfs comportant le titre manuscrit. Superbe reliure allemande de l’époque. 195 x 140 mm.
Rarissime édition originale bilingue hébreu-latin du plus célèbre traité d’astronomie d’Abraham bar Hiyya (1065-1136), un mathématicien, astronome et philosophe juif espagnol. Adams A-33 ; VD16 ZV-19 ; USTC 661378 ; STC German 1; Zinner 1891; Macclesfield 119; Burmeister, Münster 146; Houzeau & Lancaster 1217; IA 100.165; Steinschneider 673.3; Zinner 1891. Sphaera Mundi, printed with Mizrahi (Elijah) Arithmetica, translated by O. Schreckenfuchs, edited by Sebastian Munster, printed in Hebrew and Latin. “This beautifully printed volume, is both in its Hebrew and Latin parts, illustrated by neat Diagrams and Figures cut in wood; and subsequent to a Preface in Latin, gives us (underneath a short Hebrew Title) the following copious Latin Title […]. The above work of Rabbi Abraham is thus entered in the Bibliotheca Brittanica. Abraham R. Fil. Haijae, a native of Spain, and author of ‘Sphaera Mundi, Hebraice, cim versione Oswaldi Schreckenfuchsii, et Notis Sebastiani Munsteri’, Basil, 1546, 4to. The Device of Henry Petrus (the printer of this finely executed volume) appears at the end of both the Hebrew and Latin texts. The following extract from the ‘General Biography’ must necessarily be understood to designate the author of the ‘Sphaera Mundi’ notwithstanding the variation in spelling his Father’s name – ‘Abraham Ben Chaila, a Spanish Rabbi, in the 13th century, practiced Astrology, and assumed the character of a Prophet. He predicted the coming of the Messiah, and fixed for the time of his advent, the year 1358, but fortunately died in 1303 (fifty-five years before the time when his prediction was to be fulfilled). He is also said to have written a Treatise on the Figure of the Earth in Hebrew and Latin, which was published at Basel in 1546, 4to.” (A descriptive catalogue of books in the Library of John Holmes). The author, often known as Savasorda, wrote a treatise on practical geometry, which contains the earliest account of Arabic algebra written in Europe. This work deals with astronomy and geography. Il était connu sous plusieurs autres noms, dont Savasordia, Abraham Judaeus et également Abraham Hispano comme dans le présent ouvrage. Il comporte aussi « Compendium arithmetices » par Elija Orientali, également en hébreu et en latin, et « Quos Libros Osvvaldus » par Erasme Oswald Schreckenfuchs. The treatise on arithmetic by Elijah Mizrahi (c. 1540-1526), an important figure in Ottoman Jewry, was first published in Constantinople in 1533. L’ouvrage, imprimé en hébreu et en latin, comporte des commentaires et des explications de Sebastian Münster. Il est orné de nombreuses gravures sur bois et diagrammes dans le texte ainsi que de la marque de l’imprimeur répétée à la fin de chacune des deux versions hébreu et latine. Superbe exemplaire conservé dans sa reliure de l’époque en peau de truie estampée à froid sur ais de bois.
, Aetas Aurea, Vol. XI DAVACO, Cloth bound with dusjacket, as new !! 1993. 2 vols. in 4to. VIII, 710 pp. text and over 1250 ills. on 439 plts. (35 in color).Biography by Marten Jan Bok. ISBN 9070288834.
This is the first monograph on the leading Utrecht painter Abraham Bloemaert (1566-1651) and his four sons who were painters and engravers. Bloemaert emerges as the foremost master of Utrecht, his stature comparable to that of his contemporaries Hendrick Goltzius and Cornelis van Haarlem.The output of Abraham Bloemaert is considerable: over 200 extant paintings and 625 prints designed by him and engraved by such masters as Matham, Saenredam, Bolswert and Cornelis and Frederick Bloemaert. His stylistic development during an activity of sixty years leads from mannerist works in the style of Spranger and the school of Haarlem to a realist approach, a Caravaggesque interlude, a stint at court art, and a final classicizing style. He treated a multitude of themes from the Old and New Testament, altarpieces, mythological works, landscapes, and genre pieces, with important contributions in each field. A fervent Catholic with Jesuit ties, he is the chief representative of Dutch Catholic art. Connected with his lifelong teaching activity are the 166 prints of the Tekenboek. The book opens with an introductory text which sums up the art of Abraham and places it into the context of his time. The bulk of the book is the catalogue which includes in chronological sequence all the extant and the firmly documented lost paintings by Abraham, with copies and imitations, and all the original engravings designed by him. They comprise the 380 engravings by Frederick and the 60 engravings by Cornelis Bloemaert designed by their father. Separately catalogued are 30 dated drawings which provide support for undated works, and 35 comparative works by other masters. This is followed by a complete study of the fine oeuvre of Hendrick Bloemaert, the closest continuator of Abraham, hitherto largely neglected: 120 extant paintings of genre scenes, religious themes, portraits, and mythologies. Finally a study of Adriaen Bloemaert. A large proportion of the works of Abraham and his sons are here studied and reproduced for the first time. The book closes with a fully documented biography of Abraham Bloemaert and his sons and a list of pupils; this portion is the work of the Utrecht historian Marten Jan Bok.