, Brepols 2019, 2019 Hardcover, lx + 384 pages., 100 b/w ills, 550 col. ills, 215 x 280 mm , English, .fine ISBN 9782503580234.
This Checklist is the fourth and final volume in a series describing the silver-stained glassroundels and unipartite panels from the Middle Ages to the eighteenth century, found in public buildings, museums and private collections in the present five provinces of Flanders (Belgium). It also includes new information on already documented and sometimes dispersed roundels and unipartite panels. Furthermore this Checklist also mentions recently discovered collections and related material for the items described in the first three volumes and thus forms an important and indispensable addendum.
2019 Brepols Publishers Hardcover
Silver-stained Roundels and Unipartite Panels Before the French Revolution: Flanders: Addenda (Corpus Vitrearum, Belgium, Checklists) Hardcover; 285 x 215 mm, 384 pp, very good condition
, Brepols 2021, 2021 Hardcover, XVI+ 704 pages., 500 col. ills, 215 x 280 mm, English, , . ISBN 9782503593821.
This volume refers to medium-sized panels and fragments of stained-glass windows from the Middle Ages up to the end of the 18th century, found in public buildings, churches, museums and private collections in the present five provinces of Flanders (Belgium). The present volume contains the panels and fragments encountered and researched by the authors since they started their research more than thirty years ago. Many of these panels and fragments are totally unknown to the public as they have never been displayed, nor published. Nevertheless they demonstrate an important aspect of stained-glass production and stained-glass conservation. Where large windows in churches are well known to the public, it is often forgotten that even more stained glass was created for dwellings of the noble or patricians, house chapels, guild rooms, smaller spaces in abbeys, etc. It also became clear that virtually no glass was thrown away and larger fragments and panes were recycled as ?stop gaps? or integrated in composite panels, the so called ?vitraux d?antiquaires?. Furthermore archaeological sites nearly always reveal quite small pieces of glass, which could not be used for repairs or as ?cullet? in the glass production cycle. A selection of these archaeological finds is also presented in this volume. At the end of this volume ?Addenda? to the previous volumes are also added.