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The Fabric of Images

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This volume explores the largely overlooked practice of painting on textile supports in 14th- and 15th-century Europe. Combining art historical and conservation perspectives, it reconstructs origin...
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  • 01 November 2000
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During the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, painting on textile supports was carried out side by side with panel painting all over Europe. So few works survive that this important aspect of artistic production has been overlooked, especially in Italy, and the appearance of these rare paintings is frequently misunderstood.

This volume of essays by conservators and art historians adopts an interdisciplinary approach to visual and written evidence in order to reconstruct what can be known about original display, function and painting technique.

This book defines a new subject area that has implications for both conservation practice and historical study.

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Price: £42.50
Pages: 128
Publisher: Archetype Publications
Imprint: Archetype Publications
Publication Date: 01 November 2000
Trim Size: 11.70 X 8.25 in
ISBN: 9781873132272
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

ART / History / 1400-1600 C.E., Paintings and painting, History of art

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This collection of eleven essays grew out of a technical studies conference held in 1998 at the Courtauld Institute in London. It explores the first two centuries of a major technical change that occurred between 1300 and 1600, the shift from panel to canvas as the dominant paint support. The essays investigate a wide geographical range, from Tuscany and the Veneto to Paris and Flanders. They explore both silk and linen supports, royal and popular art, maps, banners, Lenten cloths, and altarpieces. They discuss such issues as how cloth paintings were stored and displayed and cultural exchanges between Italy and the Netherlands. In short, this book, although based in technical studies, will appeal to a broad range of scholars...These carefully researched essays deepen our knowledge of paintings on cloth and also perfectly illustrate the usefulness of technical studies.

Introduction

Four scenes of the Passion painted in Florence around 1400

Caroline Villers

The�Decollation of St. John the Baptist: the examination and the conservation of a fourteenth-century banner, initial comments

Alfredo Aldrovandi, Marco Ciatti and Chiara Rossi Scarzanella

Documentary evidence for the materials and handling of banners, principally

in Umbria, in the fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries

Michael Bury

The technique and materials of the�Intercession of Christ and the Virgin

attributed to Lorenzo Monaco

Charlotte Hale

The�Intercession of Christ and the Virgin�from Florence Cathedral: iconographic and ecclesiological significance

Timothy Verdon

Ambrogio Lorenzetti's�Mappamondo: a fourteenth-century picture of the

world painted on cloth

Thomas de Wesselow

Fragile devotion: two late fifteenth-century Italian�Tuchlein�examined

Helene Dubois and Lizet Klaassen

The�Parement de Narbonne: context and technique

Susie Nash

The function and display of Netherlandish cloth paintings

Catherine Reynolds

Technical observations on the so-called�Grosses Zittauer Fastentuch: a Lenten veil dating from 1472

Ulrich Schiessl, Stefan Wulfert and Renate Kuhnen

'Panni dipinti di Fiandra': Netherlandish painted cloths in fifteenth-century Florence

Paula Nuttall