Von der Renaissance zum Barock (15701670)
656 Seiten, 650 farbige Illustr., 650 col. ill.
Lieferzeit: Vorbestellbar
Erscheint am: 15.03.2010
The time period from 1570 to 1670 was an epoch of large-scale wars. But during this time of crisis in East-Central Europe the arts were in no way silent. One important factor was the migration of artists within East-Central Europe as well as from the west and south of the continent to this region. The painters and sculptors who worked for the Bohemian, Moravian, or Polisch-Lithuanian nobility, the Holy Roman Emperor Rudolf II, who wanted to obtain the best artists in Europe for his court in Prague, and, not least, the religious orders, which brought a new formal language to East-Central Europe in the course of the Counter-Reformation, contributed to multifaceted work during the long transition from the late Renaissance to the Baroque.
Agnieszka Gasior, Leibniz-Institut für Geschichte und Kultur d. östl. Europa (GWZO) Leipzig; Marius Winzeler, Nationalgalerie Prague
Autor | Agnieszka Gasior/Marius Winzeler |
---|---|
Verlag | Deutscher Kunstverlag GmbH |
ISBN | 9783422069626 |
ISBN/EAN | 9783422069626 |
Lieferzeit | Vorbestellbar |
Erscheinungsdatum | 15.03.2010 |
Lieferbarkeitsdatum | 16.12.2024 |
Einband | Gebunden |
Seitenzahl | 656 S., 650 farbige Illustr., 650 col. ill. |
Weitere Informationen
Verlag | Deutscher Kunstverlag GmbH |
---|---|
ISBN | 9783422069626 |
Erscheinungsdatum | 15.03.2010 |
Einband | Gebunden |
The time period from 1570 to 1670 was an epoch of large-scale wars. But during this time of crisis in East-Central Europe the arts were in no way silent. One important factor was the migration of artists within East-Central Europe as well as from the west and south of the continent to this region. The painters and sculptors who worked for the Bohemian, Moravian, or Polisch-Lithuanian nobility, the Holy Roman Emperor Rudolf II, who wanted to obtain the best artists in Europe for his court in Prague, and, not least, the religious orders, which brought a new formal language to East-Central Europe in the course of the Counter-Reformation, contributed to multifaceted work during the long transition from the late Renaissance to the Baroque.
Agnieszka Gasior, Leibniz-Institut für Geschichte und Kultur d. östl. Europa (GWZO) Leipzig; Marius Winzeler, Nationalgalerie Prague
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