Das französische Thesenblatt im 17. Jahrhundert

Drei Studien zur allegorischen Gattungsgenese, Ars et Scientia 27

Krcal, Konrad

287 Seiten, 54 s/w Illustr., 54 b/w ill.

79,00 €
Inkl. 7% Steuern

Lieferzeit: 5 Werktage(inkl . Versand)

This publication is dedicated to 17th-century illustrated French thesis prints from a historical and theoretical perspective. Important artists such as Charles LeBrun, Claude Vignon, and Claude Mellan are among the designers of the elaborate copperplate engravings commissioned for public defense ceremonies. Artistic practices of copying, variation, and reuse of prints and representation through art are brought into focus in three object studies. These offer comprehensive interpretations of often complex allegories, considering Baroque rhetorics, emblematics, political iconography, intertextuality, and ephemeral practices. The significance of quotation and allegorical polyvalence, as first theorized by Walter Benjamin, in Early Modern printmaking and other visual arts are discussed in a theoretical reflection on artistic genres.

Konrad Krcal, studied art history in Vienna and Göttingen, research stays in Paris, Wolfenbüttel and Munich, winning candidate of the Wolfgang Ratjen Award 2022

Mehr Informationen
Autor Krcal, Konrad
Verlag De Gruyter GmbH
ISBN 9783111100623
ISBN/EAN 9783111100623
Lieferzeit 5 Werktage(inkl . Versand)
Erscheinungsdatum 07.11.2023
Lieferbarkeitsdatum 06.05.2024
Einband Gebunden
Format 2.2 x 24.5 x 18
Seitenzahl 287 S., 54 s/w Illustr., 54 b/w ill.
Gewicht 857

Weitere Informationen

Mehr Informationen
Verlag De Gruyter GmbH
ISBN 9783111100623
Erscheinungsdatum 07.11.2023
Einband Gebunden
Format 2.2 x 24.5 x 18
Gewicht 857

This publication is dedicated to 17th-century illustrated French thesis prints from a historical and theoretical perspective. Important artists such as Charles LeBrun, Claude Vignon, and Claude Mellan are among the designers of the elaborate copperplate engravings commissioned for public defense ceremonies. Artistic practices of copying, variation, and reuse of prints and representation through art are brought into focus in three object studies. These offer comprehensive interpretations of often complex allegories, considering Baroque rhetorics, emblematics, political iconography, intertextuality, and ephemeral practices. The significance of quotation and allegorical polyvalence, as first theorized by Walter Benjamin, in Early Modern printmaking and other visual arts are discussed in a theoretical reflection on artistic genres.

Konrad Krcal, studied art history in Vienna and Göttingen, research stays in Paris, Wolfenbüttel and Munich, winning candidate of the Wolfgang Ratjen Award 2022

 

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