Listing 1 - 1 of 1 |
Sort by
|
Choose an application
"Sight and spirituality in early Netherlandish painting" examines the importance of vision as a narrative and thematic concern in works by artists such as Jan van Eyck, Petrus Christus, and Roger van der Weyden. Bret Rothstein argues that their paintings invited the viewer to demonstrate a variety of mental skills. Depicting religious visual experience, these works alluded to the imperceptibility of the divine and implicated the viewer's own experience as part of a larger spiritual and intellectual process. Rothstein demonstrates how and why the act of seeing became a highly valued skill, one to be refined and displayed, as well as a source of competition among both artists and patrons.
Painting --- worship --- Eyck, van, Jan --- Christus, Petrus I --- Pasture, de le, Roger --- anno 1400-1499 --- Belgium --- Netherlands --- Beeld (Theologie) --- Image (Theology) --- Image (Théologie) --- Nederlandse schilderkunst --- Netherlandish painting --- Painting [Netherlandish ] --- Peinture néerlandaise --- Schilderkunst [Nederlandse ] --- Painting, Netherlandish --- Christian art and symbolism --- Communication --- Art et symbolisme chrétiens --- Religious aspects --- Christianity. --- Aspect religieux --- Christianisme --- Christianity --- 75.046.3 --- Painting, Netherlandish. --- Communication (Theology) --- Religie in de schilderkunst. Heiligenbeelden --- 75.046.3 Religie in de schilderkunst. Heiligenbeelden --- Image (Theology). --- Peinture néerlandaise --- Art et symbolisme chrétiens --- Image (Théologie) --- Communication, Primitive --- Mass communication --- Sociology --- Religious aspects&delete& --- Medieval, 500-1500 --- Middle Ages, 500-1500 --- Christian art and symbolism - Medieval, 500-1500 --- Communication - Religious aspects - Christianity --- consumptie van kunst --- spiritualiteit --- schilderkunst, Nederlanden
Listing 1 - 1 of 1 |
Sort by
|