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Paint and Piety

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Focusing on objects in Scandinavian collections, the contributors explore the evolving meanings, materials, and techniques of painted surfaces over 450 years.
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  • 01 March 2014
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These collected essays on medieval painting and polychrome sculpture draw on a spectrum of vantage points and methodologies for studying the phenomena of painting over c.450 years. The papers are based on discussions held in Oslo in 2010 on topics related to medieval objects in Scandinavian collections.

The aim of these discussions was to generate a multifaceted overview of current scholarship devoted to medieval paint and painting, and its changing faces and meanings. The sum of the individual contributions is a panorama of the sort that has come to characterise the interactions and rich discourse between conservators, conservation scientists and historians. The resulting knowledge base has become a theoretical and practical underpinning for a project known as ‘After the Black Death: Painting and Polychrome Sculpture in Norway, 1350–1550’ , which is based in Conservation Studies at the University of Oslo.

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Price: £65.00
Pages: 220
Publisher: Archetype Publications
Imprint: Archetype Publications
Publication Date: 01 March 2014
Trim Size: 9.90 X 7.15 in
ISBN: 9781909492103
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

ART / Conservation & Preservation, Conservation, restoration and care of artworks, ART / History / 1000-1400 C.E.

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The book, which is an attractive volume with colour images throughout, covers a lot of ground, temporally, geographically and thematically. [...] This volume allows access to English speaking audiences for material often tackled in German and French. It is also a welcome taster of the fruits of research set to come from the researches of the Painting and Polychrome Sculpture in Norway, 1350-1550 project in coming years.


— ICON News - July 2014

Foreword

Introduction:

The medieval collection of the Museum of Cultural History, University of Oslo: a tradition of scholarship Erla Hohler and Noëlle L.W. Streeton

Part I. Locating the sacred

The longue durée of ‘Romanesque’ altar decorations: frontals, canopies, and altar sculptures Justin Kroesen

The presence of the sacred: relics in medieval wooden statues of Scandinavia Lena Liepe

A perspective on medieval perception of Norwegian church art Kaja Kollandsrud

Distribution of reliquaries and relics in the bishopric of Hólar, c. 1320 Jón Viðar Sigurðsson

Part II. Artistic production in the thirteenth century

The Sedes Sapientiae of the van den Peereboom donation to the Royal Museum of Art and History in Brussels. Materials and techniques of a polychrome sculpture from the beginning of the thirteenth century Emmanuelle Mercier and Jana Sanyova

Possible English influence on Danish polychrome wooden sculpture of the thirteenth century Ebbe Nyborg

Part III. Objects and the English church

The tester over the tomb of Richard II and Anne of Bohemia, Westminster Abbey Abigail Granville

Investigating medieval polychromy of West Country rood screens Eddie Sinclair

Reflections and translations – carving and painting rood screens Spike Bucklow

Part IV. Material histories for late medieval and early modern painting - conservation and the history of art

The so-called ‘Leka group’: new information based on examinations of four triptychs Tone M. Olstad

The altarpiece from Vardø church, Finnmark: technological and art historical context Daniela Pawel

Bernard van Orley’s The Marriage of the Virgin and Christ Among the Doctors: technical examination and the search for context Carol Christiansen and John Hand