Item does not contain fulltextLustre in the dark: The perception of Early Netherlandish painting in renaissance Italy Variations in the effects of light are the reason why Northern and Italian art of the fifteenth century mimics reality in different ways. Italian artists attempted to define our concept of three-dimensionality by means of geometrical perspective and lume (= spatial lighting). Northern artists especially used lustro (= lighting, lustre). Glossy objects in the foregrounds of Flemish paintings helped to draw the scene closer to the beholder. Lustro was therefore even used in open-air daylight scenes. In Leonardo’s mind the glossy effect of the related Italian concept of splendore in the dark bestowed the scene with a certain g...
Leonardo and ice: Leonardo’s interest for the Flemish art and vice versa The aim of the article is t...
This interdisciplinary paper hypothesizes that Rembrandt developed new painterly techniques — novel ...
Terbrugghen was the most important member of the Dutch Utrecht school. He spent ten years in Italy a...
Lustre in the dark: The perception of Early Netherlandish painting in renaissance Italy Variations ...
KERN Ulrike Light and shade in Dutch and Flemish Art Turnhout : Brepols, 2014, 224 p. Collection Thé...
Lucas van Leyden (1489/1494 - 1533) is nowadays considered the first Northern Netherlandish engraver...
Abstract. Medieval times were neither dark nor grey; natural light illuminated colourful scenes depi...
The historiography of early modern optics is dominated by a canon of names that stretches from Keple...
Leonardo and the Commentators: Seeing Things Hidden in the Earliest Essay on the Work of Art, Naples...
A variety of light sources are used in museum environments where the main concern is to prevent dama...
This essay deals with the issue of materiality in painted images of manuscripts and incunabula real...
This is a study of Duecento and Trecento Italian painters' approach to light and shade in their atte...
Perspectiva’s synthesis of Greco-Roman, Christian and Arabic theories of light, colour and vision oc...
Whereas the 17th century painter Canaletto was a master in linear perspective of the architectural e...
In the 15th century and earlier, artists used canvas supports more often than the material evidence ...
Leonardo and ice: Leonardo’s interest for the Flemish art and vice versa The aim of the article is t...
This interdisciplinary paper hypothesizes that Rembrandt developed new painterly techniques — novel ...
Terbrugghen was the most important member of the Dutch Utrecht school. He spent ten years in Italy a...
Lustre in the dark: The perception of Early Netherlandish painting in renaissance Italy Variations ...
KERN Ulrike Light and shade in Dutch and Flemish Art Turnhout : Brepols, 2014, 224 p. Collection Thé...
Lucas van Leyden (1489/1494 - 1533) is nowadays considered the first Northern Netherlandish engraver...
Abstract. Medieval times were neither dark nor grey; natural light illuminated colourful scenes depi...
The historiography of early modern optics is dominated by a canon of names that stretches from Keple...
Leonardo and the Commentators: Seeing Things Hidden in the Earliest Essay on the Work of Art, Naples...
A variety of light sources are used in museum environments where the main concern is to prevent dama...
This essay deals with the issue of materiality in painted images of manuscripts and incunabula real...
This is a study of Duecento and Trecento Italian painters' approach to light and shade in their atte...
Perspectiva’s synthesis of Greco-Roman, Christian and Arabic theories of light, colour and vision oc...
Whereas the 17th century painter Canaletto was a master in linear perspective of the architectural e...
In the 15th century and earlier, artists used canvas supports more often than the material evidence ...
Leonardo and ice: Leonardo’s interest for the Flemish art and vice versa The aim of the article is t...
This interdisciplinary paper hypothesizes that Rembrandt developed new painterly techniques — novel ...
Terbrugghen was the most important member of the Dutch Utrecht school. He spent ten years in Italy a...