Librairie Hachette 1861 1 vol. relié in-12, demi-basane fauve, dos à nerfs, caissons ornés de fleurons à froid, tranches mouchetées, 352 pp. Dos un peu passé, sinon bon état général. Tomaison au dos (n° 4). Ex-libris gravé.
Reference : 84531
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Academia Belgica in4. Sans date. Broché. 3 volume(s). Alba Fucens - 3 TOMES: I. Rapports et études 1969 + II. Rapports et études 1969 + III. Scultpures d'Alba Fucens (pierre marbre bronze) catalogue raisonné 1982 --- études de philologie d'archéologie et d'histoire anciennes (TOMES XII XIII et XXI) /// iconographie en noir et blanc
Bon état état d'ensemble couvertures défraîchies ternissures bords frottés intérieurs globalement propre qques rousseurs
Academia Belgica 1982 in4. 1982. Broché. Alba Fucens III - Sculptures d'Alba Fucens (pierre marbre bronze) Catalogue raisonné - centre belge de recherches archéologiques en Italie Centrale et Méridionale - Institut historique belge de Rome TOME XXI /// iconographie en noir et blanc
Bon Etat couverture ternie intérieur propre bords frottés pages non coupées
Editions du Seuil Broché D'occasion bon état 01/01/1968 253 pages
, Savigliano, Editrice Artistica Piemontese,, 2000 Bound, red cloth, 228 pagine; edizione Italiana; 320 x 245 x 22 mm, buono come nuovo ; sovraccoperta illustrata ; illustrazioni a colori/b/n. ISBN 9788873200277.
Macrino (a nickname that seems to describe his slim physique), born in Alba in about 1470, was unusual for a Piedmontese artist. He owes his early critical notoriety to the fact that an important painting he produced is still to be found in the Capitoline Museums, where he was promptly interpreted as a follower of the Tuscan and Umbrian Renaissance. In point of fact, Macrino had a modern Tuscan-Roman background, owed to Pinturicchio but also with local and Lombard influences. In this sense, the debate regarding his journey or journeys to Rome is not especially pertinent. His works were usually signed and dated, making it easy to attribute to a painter otherwise little known in documents and sources the Virgin with Child, Saints James, John the Evangelist, John the Baptist, and Thomas Aquinas, and Two Donors (Turin, Municipal Museum of Antique Art); the Virgin and Child with Saint Bernard of Clairvaux and the Donor (Annibale Palaeologus), and Saint John the Baptist (Tortona, Bishop?s Palace); Virgin and Child with Saints Francis and Thomas Aquinas, Angels and Two Female Donors (Alba, Town Hall); Virgin and Child with Saints James, John the Baptist, Augustine and Jerome (Treasury of the sanctuary of Crea)