This thesis provides a systematic analysis of textual frameworks in reproductive prints issued by three sixteenth-century publishers. The main purpose is to highlight the role of additional texts in the process of transmitting images by significant artists to a wide circle of audiences. The analysis of the relation between text and image in single-sheet prints helps to reconsider the historical function of reproductive prints by introducing a point of view that is different from earlier scholarship. I argue that textual commentaries attached to printed images were intended to take part in the art theoretical discourse of their time. Inscriptions contextualised artistic achievements and helped to form the viewer’s response to the image by co...
Because generally Italian Renaissance art was intellectually dependent on textual authority, it has ...
The Temples at Paestum were ‘rediscovered’ in the mid–eighteenth century and information about the t...
FONTES 59 examines the potential of prints as source documents for the history and theory of art. Wh...
This thesis provides a systematic analysis of textual frameworks in reproductive prints issued by th...
The introduction of the printing press in the transitional age between the late Middle Ages and the ...
This book examines the early development of the graphic arts from the perspectives of material thing...
This thesis examines the transmission and reception of images in Le Roman de la rose manuscripts and...
A study of the principal media of fine art printing during the fifteenth and early sixteenth centuri...
This dissertation investigates how aesthetics of printedness—in particular, styles associated with p...
Antwerp’s rapid development as the capital of printing in the early sixteenth century coincided with...
This text briefly outlines how Augsburg developed into a centre of European printmaking in the 17th ...
The late fifteenth and early sixteenth century was a significant transitional period for printmaking...
This study advocates research bridging the gap between manuscripts and prints while studying a popul...
Presenting the most comprehensive account of official print in the Holy Roman Empire during the sixt...
Engravings attributed to the anonymous early sixteenth-century Netherlandish printmaker known as Mon...
Because generally Italian Renaissance art was intellectually dependent on textual authority, it has ...
The Temples at Paestum were ‘rediscovered’ in the mid–eighteenth century and information about the t...
FONTES 59 examines the potential of prints as source documents for the history and theory of art. Wh...
This thesis provides a systematic analysis of textual frameworks in reproductive prints issued by th...
The introduction of the printing press in the transitional age between the late Middle Ages and the ...
This book examines the early development of the graphic arts from the perspectives of material thing...
This thesis examines the transmission and reception of images in Le Roman de la rose manuscripts and...
A study of the principal media of fine art printing during the fifteenth and early sixteenth centuri...
This dissertation investigates how aesthetics of printedness—in particular, styles associated with p...
Antwerp’s rapid development as the capital of printing in the early sixteenth century coincided with...
This text briefly outlines how Augsburg developed into a centre of European printmaking in the 17th ...
The late fifteenth and early sixteenth century was a significant transitional period for printmaking...
This study advocates research bridging the gap between manuscripts and prints while studying a popul...
Presenting the most comprehensive account of official print in the Holy Roman Empire during the sixt...
Engravings attributed to the anonymous early sixteenth-century Netherlandish printmaker known as Mon...
Because generally Italian Renaissance art was intellectually dependent on textual authority, it has ...
The Temples at Paestum were ‘rediscovered’ in the mid–eighteenth century and information about the t...
FONTES 59 examines the potential of prints as source documents for the history and theory of art. Wh...