This collection of works explores how Societies and Styles changed over the course of Early Modern Europe (1500-1800) from the time of the advent of printing on paper to the Industrial Revolution and beyond through little-seen printed masterpieces from the Sheldon Museum of Art’s collection. Today, “print” continues to endure even as new forms of digital publications transform our world in previously unimaginable ways, just as printing did centuries ago. This exhibition offers a view into the ways printed works of art on paper (mostly woodcuts, engravings, and etchings) showcase society and its various aspects, ranging from one Christian martyrdom of a saint to secular works focusing on fashion and death, portraits, and views of a sea serpe...
The following paper by Silvia Massa was first presented at a session sponsored by the Bibliographica...
Frederick McCubbin (1855–1917), watching students copy chromolithographs and casts in Melbourne’s Na...
Collections of printed images often make up the largest part of an art museum’s inventory of objects...
In the digital age, when videos are streamed and books can be read electronically, it is hard to fat...
During the long nineteenth century, in cities throughout Europe and North America, a new type of exh...
SCHONGAUER, MARTINALDEGREVER, HEINRICHALTDORFER, ALBRECHTBALDUNG-GRIEN, HANSBEHAM, BARTHELCRANACH, L...
There are four major techniques for making original prints. A brief descriptlon of each of these -- ...
How have printed works of art changed over time? Do printmakers today work with the same materials a...
In the digital age, when images and films can be streamed with lightning speed onto computers at the...
This catalog accompanied the exhibit which illustrated the development and impact of printing, from ...
This thesis examines the collection of fifteenth- and sixteenth-century German, Dutch and Flemish pr...
BONNARD, PIERREBOYS, THOMAS SHOTTERCEZANNE, PAULDAUMIER, HONOREDEGAS, EDGARDELACROIX, EUGENEDORE, GU...
This study asks the questions: how did prints function in fifteenth century Northern European societ...
This dissertation investigates how aesthetics of printedness—in particular, styles associated with p...
Inspiring debate since the early days of its publication, Elizabeth L. Eisenstein\u27s The Printing ...
The following paper by Silvia Massa was first presented at a session sponsored by the Bibliographica...
Frederick McCubbin (1855–1917), watching students copy chromolithographs and casts in Melbourne’s Na...
Collections of printed images often make up the largest part of an art museum’s inventory of objects...
In the digital age, when videos are streamed and books can be read electronically, it is hard to fat...
During the long nineteenth century, in cities throughout Europe and North America, a new type of exh...
SCHONGAUER, MARTINALDEGREVER, HEINRICHALTDORFER, ALBRECHTBALDUNG-GRIEN, HANSBEHAM, BARTHELCRANACH, L...
There are four major techniques for making original prints. A brief descriptlon of each of these -- ...
How have printed works of art changed over time? Do printmakers today work with the same materials a...
In the digital age, when images and films can be streamed with lightning speed onto computers at the...
This catalog accompanied the exhibit which illustrated the development and impact of printing, from ...
This thesis examines the collection of fifteenth- and sixteenth-century German, Dutch and Flemish pr...
BONNARD, PIERREBOYS, THOMAS SHOTTERCEZANNE, PAULDAUMIER, HONOREDEGAS, EDGARDELACROIX, EUGENEDORE, GU...
This study asks the questions: how did prints function in fifteenth century Northern European societ...
This dissertation investigates how aesthetics of printedness—in particular, styles associated with p...
Inspiring debate since the early days of its publication, Elizabeth L. Eisenstein\u27s The Printing ...
The following paper by Silvia Massa was first presented at a session sponsored by the Bibliographica...
Frederick McCubbin (1855–1917), watching students copy chromolithographs and casts in Melbourne’s Na...
Collections of printed images often make up the largest part of an art museum’s inventory of objects...