This paper scrutinizes decoration projects, both unexecuted and realized, for the two Cour de Cassation courtrooms in the Brussels Palais de Justice, against the backdrop of the shift from historical to symbolist monumental art and in the context of law and art's symbiosis in fin-de-siècle Brussels
This panel will address the image of the courtier in the art and architecture of northern European c...
From the fourteenth to the sixteenth century, and even in the seventeenth century, it was not uncomm...
The disciplines of jurisprudence and visual studies have recently and meaningfully overlapped. Juri...
This paper scrutinizes decoration projects, both unexecuted and realized, for the two Cour de Cassat...
This dissertation scrutinizes public legal art in the context of nineteenth-century Belgium. More sp...
The contributions to this volume were written by historians, legal historians and art historians, ea...
This is the final version of the article, which has been published in final form at: https://www.les...
This article offers a reconstruction of the decoration history of the great central hall or salle de...
Legal iconological analysis of a large scale printed work by Belgian artist Xavier Mellery (1845-192...
Publishing house Larcier uses an emblematic figure as a company brand. Since the end of the 19th cen...
Proefschrift voorgelegd tot het behalen van de graad van Doctor in de Kunstwetenschappe
This is one of the most intriguing art works I came across when researching Belgian legal iconograph...
An article discusses the use of special characters in the fine art, through which the author conveys...
In the general introduction to this contributed volume of selected conference proceedings, the title...
<p>Marinus Van Reymerswaele's painting of 1542, <italic>The Lawyer's Office</italic>, was a complete...
This panel will address the image of the courtier in the art and architecture of northern European c...
From the fourteenth to the sixteenth century, and even in the seventeenth century, it was not uncomm...
The disciplines of jurisprudence and visual studies have recently and meaningfully overlapped. Juri...
This paper scrutinizes decoration projects, both unexecuted and realized, for the two Cour de Cassat...
This dissertation scrutinizes public legal art in the context of nineteenth-century Belgium. More sp...
The contributions to this volume were written by historians, legal historians and art historians, ea...
This is the final version of the article, which has been published in final form at: https://www.les...
This article offers a reconstruction of the decoration history of the great central hall or salle de...
Legal iconological analysis of a large scale printed work by Belgian artist Xavier Mellery (1845-192...
Publishing house Larcier uses an emblematic figure as a company brand. Since the end of the 19th cen...
Proefschrift voorgelegd tot het behalen van de graad van Doctor in de Kunstwetenschappe
This is one of the most intriguing art works I came across when researching Belgian legal iconograph...
An article discusses the use of special characters in the fine art, through which the author conveys...
In the general introduction to this contributed volume of selected conference proceedings, the title...
<p>Marinus Van Reymerswaele's painting of 1542, <italic>The Lawyer's Office</italic>, was a complete...
This panel will address the image of the courtier in the art and architecture of northern European c...
From the fourteenth to the sixteenth century, and even in the seventeenth century, it was not uncomm...
The disciplines of jurisprudence and visual studies have recently and meaningfully overlapped. Juri...