Explore the latest books of this year!
Bookbot

A Documentary History of Art

The Middle Ages and the Renaissance

Parameters

  • 380 pages
  • 14 hours of reading

More about the book

In this unique collection of notebooks, letters, treatises, and contracts dealing with the art of the Middle Ages and Renaissance, the reader is not only given an extraordinary insight into the personalities and conditions of the times but is also provided with basic and illuminating documents revealing the stylistic and philosophical concerns which evolved during these intensively creative eras. Many of these works have never before been available in English or assembled together in one volume. From Raul Glaber's famous treatise of 1003 on the synthesis of old and new art forms and Durand's essay on Christian symbolism in art, to the writings of Leonardo and Dürer on anatomy, perspective, and the recreation of reality, the medieval conception of life, inspired, oriented, and dominated by the Church, evolves gradually into the great awakening in which mankind itself assumes primary importance for art.

Book purchase

A Documentary History of Art, Elizabeth Basye Gilmore Holt

Language
Released
1981
product-detail.submit-box.info.binding
(Paperback),
Book condition
Good
Price
€7.49

Payment methods

No one has rated yet.Add rating

Title
A Documentary History of Art
Subtitle
The Middle Ages and the Renaissance
Language
English
Released
1981
Format
Paperback
Pages
380
ISBN10
0691003335
ISBN13
9780691003337
Series
Description
In this unique collection of notebooks, letters, treatises, and contracts dealing with the art of the Middle Ages and Renaissance, the reader is not only given an extraordinary insight into the personalities and conditions of the times but is also provided with basic and illuminating documents revealing the stylistic and philosophical concerns which evolved during these intensively creative eras. Many of these works have never before been available in English or assembled together in one volume. From Raul Glaber's famous treatise of 1003 on the synthesis of old and new art forms and Durand's essay on Christian symbolism in art, to the writings of Leonardo and Dürer on anatomy, perspective, and the recreation of reality, the medieval conception of life, inspired, oriented, and dominated by the Church, evolves gradually into the great awakening in which mankind itself assumes primary importance for art.