London, Yale University Press/ National Gallery Publications, 1991 Illustrated cardboard cover in colour, 240 x 280mm., 408pp., profoundly illustrated in colour and b/w. . ISBN 0300050828.
This book provides a survey of European painting between 1260 and 1510, in both northern and southern Europe, based largely on the National Gallery collection, and is at the same time a guide to the paintings in the Gallery. It is published to coincide with the opening of the Sainsbury Wing in which the Early Renaissance collection will be exhibited. The authors explain the background of religious belief and devotional practice for which many of the paintings were created, and the secular requirements and ambitions which influenced them. They discuss the social context in which art was created and then displayed in the street, the palace or the church; and consider the role of the patron and the dealer. They describe the artist's workshop, consider the role of apprentices and assistance, discuss the influence of guilds and courts and explore the reasons for the introduction of new subjects and techniques and also the survival of traditions. The book goes on to supply an account of the materials and techniques of the early Renaissance artist. Good condition.
JAFFÉ David ( editor) - Charles Hope - Jennifer Fletcher - Jill Dunkerton - Miguel Falomir ( contributors) - :
Reference : 38281
2. London, National Gallery (and Yale U.P.), 2003, in-4°, 192 pp, colour ills., sewn, orig. stiff wrapper. Published to accompany an exhibition in the National Gallery in London.