Cr mone, R gion Lombardie, 2004 Couverture lin bleu sous jaquette, Volumes 1 et 2(3 tomes total), 249+351+188 pages, 29.5 x 21.5 cm. FR text. bon etat. ISBN 8890156120.
Volume 1: Cr mone et sa province. Volume 2.1: Pavie. Antiquit . Volume 2.2: Pavie. Epoque m di vale et moderne.
Roma, Istituto Poligrafico dello Stato-Libreria dello Stato, 1984 2 volumes, hardcover with dustjacket in folder, 340 pages, 29.5 x 23 cm. Italian. ISBN 03919854.
Due bronzi da Riace, rinvenimento, restauro, analisied ipotesi di interpretazione. 2 vol. (Bollettino d'arte serie speciale - 3)
, Metropolitan Museum of Art New York 1988, 1988 Paperback, 134 pages, ENG, 280 x 215 mm, book as new, with illustrations / images in colour. ISBN 9780870995101.
Dutch and Flemish Renaissance painting represents the 16th-century response to Italian Renaissance art in the Low Countries. These artists, who span from the Antwerp Mannerists and Hieronymus Bosch at the start of the 16th century to the late Northern Mannerists such as Hendrik Goltzius and Joachim Wtewael at the end, drew on both the recent innovations of Italian painting and the local traditions of the Early Netherlandish artists. Antwerp was the most important artistic centre in the region. Many artists worked for European courts, including Bosch, whose fantastic painted images left a long legacy. Jan Mabuse, Maarten van Heemskerck and Frans Floris were all instrumental in adopting Italian models and incorporating them into their own artistic language. Pieter Brueghel the Elder, with Bosch the only artist from the period to remain widely familiar, may seem atypical, but in fact his many innovations drew on the fertile artistic scene in Antwerp.
, , 1991 softcover, 225 pagina's. 75 afbeeldingen in kleur/150 in zwart wit. Nederlands /. ISBN 9789070149277.
Dit boek biedt een rijk ge llustreerd overzicht van de verschillende aspecten van het complete werk van de Russische kunstenaar. Het boek is verschenen n.a.v. de grote overzichtstentoonstelling in het van Abbemuseum i.s.m. de Staats Tretjakov Galerij te Moskou
Industries Françaises de l'Ameublement, Paris, 1995. Un volume in-8, couverture rempliée, 140 pages, illustrations en couleurs. Etat de neuf.
La librairie est ouverte du mardi au samedi de 9h30 à 12h30 et de 13h30 à 19h00. Commandes par courriel ou téléphone. Envoi rapide, emballage soigné. La librairie est ouverte du mardi au samedi de 9h30 à 12h30 et de 13h30 à 19h00. Commandes par courriel ou téléphone. Envoi rapide, emballage soigné.
, Cambridge University Press (1978), 1978 Paperback, 127 pages, ENG, 245 x 190 mm, in good condition, with illustrations in b/w. ISBN 0521293359.
Brugge, Uitgeverij Marc Van de Wiele, 1997 Softcover met flappen, 353 pag. NL, 300 x 300 x 25 mm, in prima staat, talloze afb. / illustr. in kleur / z/w., groot formaat ISBN 9789069661131.
Antwerpen , Vereniging van Antwerpse Bibliofielen, 2024 Oorspronkelijk uitgeversomslag, 112 pagina's, 24 x 16 cm, NL.
, [BE] BAI - MAS Books , Hardback, 285x210mm, 192p, throughout colour illustrations, Dutch (NL) edition . ISBN 9789085866718.
Expo: 19/9/2014 - 18/1/2015, Museum Mas, Antwerpen Deze rijk geillustreerde catalogus bij de tentoonstellling 'Heilige Plaatsen' vertelt over het belang van heiligdommen in het jodendom, het christendom en de islam en hoe die al eeuwen een magnetische aantrekkingskracht uitoefenen. Het MAS biedt een venster op de levende traditie van de pelgrimage. Joden, christenen en moslims voelen zich sterk verbonden met hun heilige plaatsen. Pelgrims leggen een lange reis af om er goddelijke krachten te ervaren. De tentoonstelling volgt hun reis van het vertrek en het bezoek aan het heiligdom tot aan hun thuiskomst. Waarom trekken bepaalde plekken mensen zo aan? Wat maakt plaatsen als Jeruzalem, Rome of Mekka zo bijzonder? Waarom bezoekt men het graf van heiligen? Reis met de pelgrims mee door de tentoonstelling en beleef hun gevoelens van hoop, extase en loutering. De essays van Walter Van Herck, Edward van Voolen, Guus van den Hout, Mirjam Shatanawi en Luitgard Mols worden verrijkt met literaire bijdragen van Chaim Be'er, Rosita Steenbeek en Rachida Lamrabeet.
Antwerp, J.E. BUSCHMANN, 1910 Original publishers paper-covered boards, 14 + 34 pages, many b/w photo's, 15.5 x 23 cm.
Paris, Tardy, 1977 Broch , 480 pages, 32 x 23.5 cm. Illustr avec plusieurs images en NB. Textes en Fran ais. tres belle exemplare.
Les Ivoires. Deuxi me partie; Antiquit -Islam-Inde-Chine-Japon-Afrique Noire- R gions Polaires- Am rique.
Corning, Corning Museum of Glass, 1992 Publisher's paper-covered boards, 235 pages, 27.5 x 20 cm.
In this volume, Maud Spaer discusses Islamic glass bracelets excavated in Palestine. Also, Jane Shadel Spillman sheds light on a 19th century notebook in the Gillinder archives. In addition, important recent acquisitions, with photos, are listed. Table of Contents and Abstracts Glass Vessels from the Burial of Nesikhons p. 11 Birgit Schlick-Nolte and Rainer Werthmann A Glass Pendant in the Shape of Harpokrates from Yavneh-Yam, Israel p. 35 Moshe Fischer and Ruth E. Jackson-Tal Glass and Faience Vessels from Sarmatian Graves of Ukraine p. 41 Alexander V. Simonenko Glass in Tunisia: The Contribution of Recent Franco-Tunisian Excavations (In French) p. 59 Dani le Foy A Bowl Engraved with Abraham?s Sacrifice from Boulogne-sur-Mer, Pas-de-Calais (France) (In French) p. 91 H l ne Chew A ?Souvenir? from Baiae in Asturica Augusta (Roman Province of Hispania Tarraconensis) (In Spanish) p. 105 Mar a Teresa Amar Tafalla, Mar a Esperanza Ortiz Palomar, and Juan ngel Paz Peralta Scientific Analyses of Glasses from Late Antique and Early Medieval Archaeological Sites in Northern Italy p. 115 Marina Uboldi and Marco Verit Glassmaking in Medieval Tyre: The Written Evidence p. 139 Stefano Carboni, Giancarlo Lacerenza, and David Whitehouse The John Troup Decanter: Saluting Freemasonry in 18th-Century America p. 151 J. Garrison Stradling The Blaschkas? Lampworking Tables p. 167 Susan M. Rossi-Wilcox, Henri Reiling, and Philip Bisaga Notes p. 179 Contributors p. 177 Recent Important Acquisitions p. 203 Note to Authors and Readers p. 233 Museum Publications p. 271 Abstracts p. 279
Corning, Corning Museum of Glass, 1994 Publisher's paper-covered boards, 235 pages, 27.5 x 20 cm.
In this volume, Maud Spaer discusses Islamic glass bracelets excavated in Palestine. Also, Jane Shadel Spillman sheds light on a 19th century notebook in the Gillinder archives. In addition, important recent acquisitions, with photos, are listed. Table of Contents and Abstracts Glass Vessels from the Burial of Nesikhons p. 11 Birgit Schlick-Nolte and Rainer Werthmann A Glass Pendant in the Shape of Harpokrates from Yavneh-Yam, Israel p. 35 Moshe Fischer and Ruth E. Jackson-Tal Glass and Faience Vessels from Sarmatian Graves of Ukraine p. 41 Alexander V. Simonenko Glass in Tunisia: The Contribution of Recent Franco-Tunisian Excavations (In French) p. 59 Dani le Foy A Bowl Engraved with Abraham?s Sacrifice from Boulogne-sur-Mer, Pas-de-Calais (France) (In French) p. 91 H l ne Chew A ?Souvenir? from Baiae in Asturica Augusta (Roman Province of Hispania Tarraconensis) (In Spanish) p. 105 Mar a Teresa Amar Tafalla, Mar a Esperanza Ortiz Palomar, and Juan ngel Paz Peralta Scientific Analyses of Glasses from Late Antique and Early Medieval Archaeological Sites in Northern Italy p. 115 Marina Uboldi and Marco Verit Glassmaking in Medieval Tyre: The Written Evidence p. 139 Stefano Carboni, Giancarlo Lacerenza, and David Whitehouse The John Troup Decanter: Saluting Freemasonry in 18th-Century America p. 151 J. Garrison Stradling The Blaschkas? Lampworking Tables p. 167 Susan M. Rossi-Wilcox, Henri Reiling, and Philip Bisaga Notes p. 179 Contributors p. 177 Recent Important Acquisitions p. 203 Note to Authors and Readers p. 233 Museum Publications p. 271 Abstracts p. 279
Corning, Corning Museum of Glass, 1994 Publisher's paper-covered boards, 235 pages, 27.5 x 20 cm.
In this volume, Donald Royce-Roll reports that before the 13th century, technology limited the colors available for stained glass. And Mateja Kos writes about the 16th-century glass industry that flourished in what is now Slovenia. Also, this issue lists important recent acquisitions, with photographs included. Table of Contents and Abstracts Glass Vessels from the Burial of Nesikhons p. 11 Birgit Schlick-Nolte and Rainer Werthmann A Glass Pendant in the Shape of Harpokrates from Yavneh-Yam, Israel p. 35 Moshe Fischer and Ruth E. Jackson-Tal Glass and Faience Vessels from Sarmatian Graves of Ukraine p. 41 Alexander V. Simonenko Glass in Tunisia: The Contribution of Recent Franco-Tunisian Excavations (In French) p. 59 Dani le Foy A Bowl Engraved with Abraham?s Sacrifice from Boulogne-sur-Mer, Pas-de-Calais (France) (In French) p. 91 H l ne Chew A ?Souvenir? from Baiae in Asturica Augusta (Roman Province of Hispania Tarraconensis) (In Spanish) p. 105 Mar a Teresa Amar Tafalla, Mar a Esperanza Ortiz Palomar, and Juan ngel Paz Peralta Scientific Analyses of Glasses from Late Antique and Early Medieval Archaeological Sites in Northern Italy p. 115 Marina Uboldi and Marco Verit Glassmaking in Medieval Tyre: The Written Evidence p. 139 Stefano Carboni, Giancarlo Lacerenza, and David Whitehouse The John Troup Decanter: Saluting Freemasonry in 18th-Century America p. 151 J. Garrison Stradling The Blaschkas? Lampworking Tables p. 167 Susan M. Rossi-Wilcox, Henri Reiling, and Philip Bisaga Notes p. 179 Contributors p. 177 Recent Important Acquisitions p. 203 Note to Authors and Readers p. 233 Museum Publications p. 271 Abstracts p. 279
Corning, Corning Museum of Glass, 1995 Publisher's paper-covered boards, 225 pages, 27.5 x 20 cm.
George D. Scott closely examines the Lycurgus Cup, a remarkable cage cup from about the fourth century A.D. This issue also features a chemical analysis of pieces of medieval lead glass from northwestern Europe. In addition, important recent acquisitions, with photos, are listed.
Corning, Corning Museum of Glass, 1996 Publisher's paper-covered boards, 360 pages, 27.5 x 20 cm.
This volume is devoted to a study of the life of Franz Gondelach, a German and one of the most brilliant engravers of the 18th century. The piece, in 16 chapters, was written by Franz Adrian Dreier, a distinguished scholar of European glass. Also included in this volume is a list, with pictures, of recent important acquisitions.
Corning, Corning Museum of Glass, 1997 Publisher's paper-covered boards, 301 pages, 27.5 x 20 cm.
In this volume, Francesca Dell'Acqua looks at ninth-century window glass excavated from the ruins of the monastery of San Vincenzo, and Mary Margaret Cheek examines a 19th-century cooperative venture at the Union Glass Works in Kensington, Pennsylvania. Also included in this volume is a listing of important recent acquisitions.
Corning, Corning Museum of Glass, 1998 Publisher's paper-covered boards, 287 pages, 27.5 x 20 cm.
In this volume, Henri Reiling looks at the origins of the Blaschkas' glass animals. Also featured are articles on glassmaking at Tell el-Amarna, Egypt; Bet Shean, Israel; and Gao, Mali.
Corning, Corning Museum of Glass, 1999 Publisher's paper-covered boards, 288 pages, 27.5 x 20 cm.
In this volume, Susan H. Auth discusses ancient mosaic glass plaques that feature images of masks, and relates those images to masks used in Hellenistic Greek theater. Also, Michael W. Cothren reports that 13th-century glass panels in a Pennsylvania museum offer clues to stained glass production practices in medieval times. This volume also lists important recent acquisitions, with photos.
Corning, Corning Museum of Glass, 2000 Publisher's paper-covered boards, 299 pages, 27.5 x 20 cm.
IIn this volume, Peter Francis examines George Minty's memoirs of being a glassmaker in 18th century Ireland, and An Jiayao takes a look at the 1994 excavation in China of 150,000 glass beads from the sixth century. Additional articles discuss ancient glass found in Egypt, Italy, and Lebanon. In addition, important recent acquisitions, with pictures, are listed. Published since 1959, the generously illustrated Journal of Glass Studies is the only academic publication devoted entirely to the scholarship of the art, history, and early technology of glass.
Corning, Corning Museum of Glass, 2001 Publisher's paper-covered boards, 319 pages, 27.5 x 20 cm.
In this volume, Marie-Leen Ryckaert examines a goblet in a Dutch museum with complex engravings, and Kenneth M. Wilson offers a quick history of plate glass in America. Also, recent important acquisitions, accompanied by pictures, are listed.
Corning, Corning Museum of Glass, 2002 Publisher's paper-covered boards, 319 pages, 27.5 x 20 cm.
This volume features a look at glassmaking operations in medieval Tyre, Lebanon, that were uncovered in an extensive excavation. In addition, although Corning, New York, has long been a glassmaking center, its neighbor to the east, Elmira, also has a glass history, as Norma P.H. Jenkins reports. Also, important recent acquisitions, with photos, are noted. Table of Contents and Abstracts Colorless Glass in Late Classical and Early Hellenistic Macedonia p. 11 Despina Ignatiadou Two Roman Engraved Glasses in The Metropolitan Museum of Art p. 25 Lisa Pilosi and Mark T. Wypyski Glass Vessels with Stamps from the Byzantine through Abbasid Periods at Bet Shean, Israel p. 35 Shulamit Hadad Medieval Glassmaking at Tyre, Lebanon p. 49 Fred Aldsworth, George Haggarty, Sarah Jennings, and David Whitehouse Composition and Affinities of Glass from the Furnaces on the Island Site, Tyre p. 67 Ian C. Freestone Medieval Glass Mirrors in Southern Scandinavia and Their Technique, as Still Practiced in India p. 79 Jan Kock and Torben Sode 13th-Century Drinking Glasses from the Cour Carr e, Louvre p. 95 Michel Fleury, Catherine Brut, and Bruce Velde A Second Aldrevandin Beaker and an Update on a Group of Enameled Glasses p. 111 Ingeborg Krueger Der ?Alte Petronellische Willkhumb?: Ein Geschenk des ungarischen K nigs Matthias Corvinus an einen besiegten Gegner p. 133 Rudolf von Strasser Manuscrito de Francisco Ramos Rico, grabador de la Real F brica de Cristales de La Granja p. 145 Paloma Pastor Rey de Vi as Corning?s Near Neighbors: The Cut Glass Companies of the Elmira, New York, Area p. 167 Norma P.H. Jenkins
Corning, Corning Museum of Glass, 2003 Publisher's paper-covered boards, 283 pages, 27.5 x 20 cm, shrinkwrapped.
Articles in this volume include glass vessels found in the Theban tomb of Nesikhons, texts and translations of seven Arabic, Hebrew, and Latin documents that refer to glass made at Tyre between A.D. 985 and the early 13th century, an exploration of an unusual 18th-century American lead glass decanter engraved with Masonic symbols, and a discussion of the lampworking table used by Leopold and Rudolf Blaschka to create their extraordinary lampworked figures. Table of Contents and Abstracts Glass Vessels from the Burial of Nesikhons p. 11 Birgit Schlick-Nolte and Rainer Werthmann A Glass Pendant in the Shape of Harpokrates from Yavneh-Yam, Israel p. 35 Moshe Fischer and Ruth E. Jackson-Tal Glass and Faience Vessels from Sarmatian Graves of Ukraine p. 41 Alexander V. Simonenko Glass in Tunisia: The Contribution of Recent Franco-Tunisian Excavations (In French) p. 59 Dani le Foy A Bowl Engraved with Abraham?s Sacrifice from Boulogne-sur-Mer, Pas-de-Calais (France) (In French) p. 91 H l ne Chew A ?Souvenir? from Baiae in Asturica Augusta (Roman Province of Hispania Tarraconensis) (In Spanish) p. 105 Mar a Teresa Amar Tafalla, Mar a Esperanza Ortiz Palomar, and Juan ngel Paz Peralta Scientific Analyses of Glasses from Late Antique and Early Medieval Archaeological Sites in Northern Italy p. 115 Marina Uboldi and Marco Verit Glassmaking in Medieval Tyre: The Written Evidence p. 139 Stefano Carboni, Giancarlo Lacerenza, and David Whitehouse The John Troup Decanter: Saluting Freemasonry in 18th-Century America p. 151 J. Garrison Stradling The Blaschkas? Lampworking Tables p. 167 Susan M. Rossi-Wilcox, Henri Reiling, and Philip Bisaga Notes p. 179 Contributors p. 177 Recent Important Acquisitions p. 203 Note to Authors and Readers p. 233 Museum Publications p. 271 Abstracts p. 279
Corning, Corning Museum of Glass, 2004 Publisher's paper-covered boards, 239 pages, 27.5 x 20 cm.
In this volume, Emily Byrne Curtis looks at the important role that glass imported from China played in Tibetan culture. And Beatrice Scheer Smith details how a study of lead content revealed previously unknown information about New England Pomona glass. This volume also features studies of glass from the late Hellenistic and Byzantine periods. In addition, important recent acquisitions, with pictures, are listed. Table of Contents and Abstracts Remarks on a Glass Object from Kh rga Oasis: A New Class of Cast Glass Plates (In Italian) p. 33 Bruno Massab Glass Dessert Table Settings in Venice in the 18th Century (In Italian) p. 159 Paolo Zecchin The Late Hellenistic Glass Industry in Syro-Palestine: A Reappraisal p. 11 Ruth E. Jackson-Tal Some Dubious Stylites on Early Byzantine Glassware p. 39 David Woods New Evidence of the Production of Raw Glass at Late Byzantine Apollonia-Arsuf, Israel p. 51 Oren Tal, Ruth E. Jackson-Tal, and Ian C. Freestone Stained Glass from Saint-Jean-des-Vignes (Soissons) and Comparisons with Glass from Other Medieval Sites p. 115 Robert H. Brill and Patricia Pongracz Glass from Qal?at Sem?an (Northern Syria): The Reworking of Glass during the Transition from Roman to Islamic Compositions p. 67 Odile Dussart, Bruce Velde, Pierre-Marie Blanc, and Jean-Pierre Sodini Silver-Stained Windows at Carolingian Zalav r, Mosaburg (Southwestern Hungary) p. 85 B la Mikl s Sz?ke, Karl Hans Wedepohl, and Andreas Kronz Silver Stain on Medieval Window Glass Excavated in the Venetian Lagoon p. 105 Francesca Vaghi, Marco Verit , and Sandro Zecchin Abstracts p. 236 Glass and Glassmaking in Byzantine Italy: The Testimony of ?abbe?ay Donnolo p. 109 Giancarlo Lacerenza and David Whitehouse Glass from China for the Land above the Clouds p. 145 Emily Byrne Curtis New England Pomona (1885?1887): Lead Analysis as a Study Tool p. 173 Beatrice Scheer Smith Contributors p. 187 Notes p. 189 Recent Important Acquisitions p. 213 Note to Authors and Readers p. 228 Museum Publications p. 229
, RaschVerlag, 2013 Broschur, 116 seiten, 24 x 30 cm. GER. ISBN 9783899462135.
Mit einer Einf hrung von Peter Friese und einem Interview mit J rgen Wesseler von Joachim Kreibohm. Weitere Texte von Guido Boulboull , Ingo Clau , Maren Meier, Christoph Benken und Jenny Sch ncke.