Busque também em nossas outras coleções:

Data da imagem:
Pauta
ver mais opções...
Agência
Fotógrafo
ver mais opções...
Pais
Estado
Cidade
Local
Editorias
Tipo de licença
Orientação
Coleção

Total de Resultados: 76

Página 1 de 1

20220919_zaa_s197_318 September 19, 2022, South Konawe, South East Sulawesi, Indonesia: Marble stone from the marble quarry in north moramo is loaded onto trucks for immediate distribution. Mountains in the northern Moramo area can be used for various things, including marble and ornamental stone. Marble in this area also gives the appearance of various textures, namely subidioblastic and xenoblastic textures (Credit Image: © Andry Denisah/SOPA Images/Zuma Press/Fotoarena Wire)
DC
20220919_zaa_s197_319 September 19, 2022, South Konawe, South East Sulawesi, Indonesia: (EDITORS NOTE: Image taken with drone).Mountains used as marble mining sites in northern Moramo. Mountains in the northern Moramo area can be used for various things, including marble and ornamental stone. Marble in this area also gives the appearance of various textures, namely subidioblastic and xenoblastic textures (Credit Image: © Andry Denisah/SOPA Images/Zuma Press/Fotoarena Wire)
DC
20220919_zaa_s197_315 September 19, 2022, South Konawe, South East Sulawesi, Indonesia: (EDITORS NOTE: Image taken with drone).Marble stone from the marble quarry in north moramo is loaded onto trucks for immediate distribution. Mountains in the northern Moramo area can be used for various things, including marble and ornamental stone. Marble in this area also gives the appearance of various textures, namely subidioblastic and xenoblastic textures (Credit Image: © Andry Denisah/SOPA Images/Zuma Press/Fotoarena Wire)
DC
20220919_zaa_s197_316 September 19, 2022, South Konawe, South East Sulawesi, Indonesia: (EDITORS NOTE: Image taken with drone).Marble stone from the marble quarry in north moramo is loaded onto trucks for immediate distribution. Mountains in the northern Moramo area can be used for various things, including marble and ornamental stone. Marble in this area also gives the appearance of various textures, namely subidioblastic and xenoblastic textures (Credit Image: © Andry Denisah/SOPA Images/Zuma Press/Fotoarena Wire)
DC
20220919_zaa_s197_314 September 19, 2022, South Konawe, South East Sulawesi, Indonesia: A view of the rock mountain drilling process in marble stone quarry in north moramo. Mountains in the northern Moramo area can be used for various things, including marble and ornamental stone. Marble in this area also gives the appearance of various textures, namely subidioblastic and xenoblastic textures (Credit Image: © Andry Denisah/SOPA Images/Zuma Press/Fotoarena Wire)
DC
41620251 Process of loading marble stone from stone quarry in north moramo. Mountains in the northern Moramo area can be used for various things, including marble and ornamental stone. Marble in this area also gives the appearance of various textures, namely subidioblastic and xenoblastic textures (based on individual crystal shapes). Photo Credit: Andry Denisah / SOPA Images/ Sipa/ Fotoarena
DC
41620257 (EDITORS NOTE: Image taken with drone)Mountains used as marble mining sites in northern Moramo. Mountains in the northern Moramo area can be used for various things, including marble and ornamental stone. Marble in this area also gives the appearance of various textures, namely subidioblastic and xenoblastic textures (based on individual crystal shapes). Photo Credit: Andry Denisah / SOPA Images/ Sipa/ Fotoarena
DC
41620252 (EDITORS NOTE: Image taken with drone)Marble stone from the marble quarry in north moramo is loaded onto trucks for immediate distribution. Mountains in the northern Moramo area can be used for various things, including marble and ornamental stone. Marble in this area also gives the appearance of various textures, namely subidioblastic and xenoblastic textures (based on individual crystal shapes). Photo Credit: Andry Denisah / SOPA Images/ Sipa/ Fotoarena
DC
41620248 A view of the rock mountain drilling process in marble stone quarry in north moramo. Mountains in the northern Moramo area can be used for various things, including marble and ornamental stone. Marble in this area also gives the appearance of various textures, namely subidioblastic and xenoblastic textures (based on individual crystal shapes). Photo Credit: Andry Denisah / SOPA Images/ Sipa/ Fotoarena
DC
41620256 Marble stone from the marble quarry in north moramo is loaded onto trucks for immediate distribution. Mountains in the northern Moramo area can be used for various things, including marble and ornamental stone. Marble in this area also gives the appearance of various textures, namely subidioblastic and xenoblastic textures (based on individual crystal shapes). Photo Credit: Andry Denisah / SOPA Images/ Sipa/ Fotoarena
DC
41620255 (EDITORS NOTE: Image taken with drone)Marble stone from the marble quarry in north moramo is loaded onto trucks for immediate distribution. Mountains in the northern Moramo area can be used for various things, including marble and ornamental stone. Marble in this area also gives the appearance of various textures, namely subidioblastic and xenoblastic textures (based on individual crystal shapes). Photo Credit: Andry Denisah / SOPA Images/ Sipa/ Fotoarena
DC
ibxlar10425340 Close-up of a textured marble surface with grey tones and pink streaks
RF
ibxuzg10216850 The texture of natural stone, sandstone, limestone, granite
RF
ibxuzg10217031 The texture of natural stone, sandstone, limestone, granite
RF
ibxuzg10216885 The texture of natural stone, sandstone, limestone, granite
RF
ibxuzg10216852 The texture of natural stone, sandstone, limestone, granite
RF
ibxcav10324633 Close-up of the texture of a pink and white marble surface, balearic islands mallorca, spain6
RF
ibxuzg10216853 The texture of natural stone, sandstone, limestone, granite
RF
ibxuzg10216855 The texture of natural stone, sandstone, limestone, granite
RF
ibxuzg10216851 The texture of natural stone, sandstone, limestone, granite
RF
alb3666275 Speculum Romanae Magnificentiae: The Column of Trajan. Artist: Anonymous, Italian, 16th century; After Antonio da Labacco (Italian, near Vigevano ca. 1495-after 1567). Dimensions: mount: 26 5/16 x 19 1/2 in. (66.8 x 49.6 cm)sheet: 21 1/8 x 14 3/8 in. (53.6 x 36.5 cm). Publisher: Antonio Lafreri (French, Orgelet, Franche-Comte ca. 1512-1577 Rome). Series/Portfolio: Speculum Romanae Magnificentiae. Date: 16th century.This print comes from the museum's copy of the Speculum Romanae Magnificentiae (The Mirror of Roman Magnificence) The Speculum found its origin in the publishing endeavors of Antonio Salamanca and Antonio Lafreri. During their Roman publishing careers, the two foreign publishers - who worked together between 1553 and 1563 - initiated the production of prints recording art works, architecture and city views related to Antique and Modern Rome. The prints could be bought individually by tourists and collectors, but were also purchased in larger groups which were often bound together in an album. In 1573, Lafreri commissioned a title page for this purpose, which is where the title 'Speculum Romanae Magnificentiae' first appears. Lafreri envisioned an ideal arrangement of the prints in 7 different categories, but during his lifetime, never appears to have offered one standard, bound set of prints. Instead, clients composed their own selection from the corpus to be bound, or collected a group of prints over time. When Lafreri died, two-third of the existing copper plates went to the Duchetti family (Claudio and Stefano), while another third was distributed among several publishers. The Duchetti appear to have standardized production, offering a more or less uniform version of the Speculum to their clients. The popularity of the prints also inspired other publishers in Rome to make copies however, and to add new prints to the corpus. The museum's copy of the Speculum entered the collection as a group of 3 albums with inlaid engravings and etchings. The prints have since been removed, but the original place of each print within the album is contained in the accession number: 41.72(volume.place).Originally volume 1, plate 95 in the scrapbook. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
DC
ibxtyk09807670 Abstract picture of the heart. Creative marbling heart pattern background texture
RF
ibxtyk09795519 Abstract picture of the heart. Creative marbling heart pattern background texture
RF
ibxtyk09795472 Abstract picture of the heart. Creative marbling heart pattern background texture
RF
ibxtyk09806917 Abstract picture of the heart. Creative marbling heart pattern background texture
RF
ibxole09821125 Elevated view camera lens accessories marble textured background
RF
ibxmob09235711 Close up of leaf of tropical 'Monstera Karstenianum' house plant, also called 'Monstera sp. Peru' or 'Marble Planet', with puckered, iridescent textured leaves on dark black background
RF
alb3648573 Speculum Romanae Magnificentiae: Amphiteathrum Castrense. Artist: Anonymous. Dimensions: sheet: 12 13/16 x 18 1/8 in. (32.6 x 46 cm)mount: 20 x 26 in. (50.8 x 66 cm). Publisher: Antonio Lafreri (French, Orgelet, Franche-Comte ca. 1512-1577 Rome). Series/Portfolio: Speculum Romanae Magnificentiae. Date: 1560.This print comes from the museum's copy of the Speculum Romanae Magnificentiae (The Mirror of Roman Magnificence) The Speculum found its origin in the publishing endeavors of Antonio Salamanca and Antonio Lafreri. During their Roman publishing careers, the two foreign publishers - who worked together between 1553 and 1563 - initiated the production of prints recording art works, architecture and city views related to Antique and Modern Rome. The prints could be bought individually by tourists and collectors, but were also purchased in larger groups which were often bound together in an album. In 1573, Lafreri commissioned a title page for this purpose, which is where the title 'Speculum Romanae Magnificentiae' first appears. Lafreri envisioned an ideal arrangement of the prints in 7 different categories, but during his lifetime, never appears to have offered one standard, bound set of prints. Instead, clients composed their own selection from the corpus to be bound, or collected a group of prints over time. When Lafreri died, two-third of the existing copper plates went to the Duchetti family (Claudio and Stefano), while another third was distributed among several publishers. The Duchetti appear to have standardized production, offering a more or less uniform version of the Speculum to their clients. The popularity of the prints also inspired other publishers in Rome to make copies however, and to add new prints to the corpus. The museum's copy of the Speculum entered the collection as a group of 3 albums with inlaid engravings and etchings. The prints have since been removed, but the original place of each print within the album is contained in the accession number: 41.72(volume.place).Originally volume 1, plate 60 in the scrapbook. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
DC
alb9520010 Veiled Lady, c. 1860, Raffaelo Monti, Italian, 1818-1881, 21 1/2 in. (54.61 cm), Marble, Italy, 19th century, We cant see through stone, but through tricks of light and polish, Raffaelo Monti created the illusion that we can. On his Veiled Lady, the top of the head and shoulders are polished smooth, to reflect light. But where the veil falls across the face, the marble is less polished. It reflects less light, suggesting the texture of fabric. Sculptures of veiled figures peaked in popularity during the 1700s in Italy, an opportunity for sculptors to show their technical mastery over marble. About a century later, Raffaelo Monti and other artists revived this technically demanding tradition.
DC
alb3901542 Study of Sculpture: from the Elgin Marbles. Drawing. Graphite on medium, smooth, cream wove paper. Height: 219 mm (8.62 in); Width: 175 mm (6.88 in). Author: James Ward.
DC
alb3901545 Study of Two Headless Classical Statues. Drawing. Graphite on medium, slightly textured, cream wove paper. Height: 251 mm (9.88 in); Width: 267 mm (10.51 in). Author: James Ward.
DC
alb4137184 Casket Depicting Scenes from the Old Testament. Made by Rebecca Stonier Plaisted (English, active, c. 1668); England. Date: 1668. Dimensions: 39 × 38.3 × 29 cm (15 3/8 × 15 × 11 1/2 in.). Silk, warp-float faced satin weave; embroidered with silk floss, silk yarns, and silk-wrapped-metal purl in brick, bullion, Ceylon, chain, knot, lattice filling, overcast, running, satin, Smyrna cross, tent, and a variety of buttonhole stitches; laid work, couching, and padded couching; French and Turkey knots; applied areas of linen, plain weave; seed pearls, coral beads, and mica; and silk, plain weave with ground weft fringe; edged with gilt-metal-strip-wrapped silk and gilt-metal strip, plain weave; silver hardware; wooden frame; lined with marbled paper; silk, plain weave; and silk, plain weave with supplementary pile warps forming cut solid velvet. Origin: England. Museum: The Chicago Art Institute, Chicago, USA.
DC
alb3632789 Hercules Delivering the Erymanthean Boar to Eurystheus. Artist: François Lespingola (French, 1644-1705). Culture: French, probably Paris. Dimensions: Overall, maximum dims (confirmed): 16 3/8 × 14 [edge of base to cuff of sleeve] × 11 1/4 in. [boar crest to boar hoof], 32.8 lb. (41.6 × 35.6 × 28.6 cm, 14.9 kg)Base: 12 3/4 × 6 1/4 in. (32.4 × 15.9 cm). Date: last quarter 17th century.Hercules' fourth Labor was to drag before King Eurystheus a wild boar that had been wreaking devastation around Mount Erymanthus. This spirited composition divulges some of Lespingola's experiences in Italy between 1672 and 1675. The figure of Hercules is poised to fling the beast in the same way David is ready to sling his shot at Goliath in the marble masterpiece by Gian Lorenzo Bernini (1623-24; Galleria Borghese, Rome). Presumably Lespingola got to know the dramatic bronze groups invented by Massimiliano Soldani and Giovanni Battista Foggini in Florence. His are ruggedly textured, their reddish metal having been lightly peened all over to producesurfaces as lively and painterly as the compositions themselves. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
DC
alb3629848 Benjamin Franklin. Artist: Henry Kirke Brown (American, Leyden, Massachusetts 1814-1886 Newburgh, New York). Dimensions: 9 3/8 x 8 1/2 x 1 3/4 in. (23.8 x 21.6 x 4.4 cm). Date: 1852.In 1852 Brown completed high-relief profile portraits of three American founding fathers - George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, and Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790). The Franklin medallion reflects Brown's signature naturalistic modeling of human form, evident in the receding hairline, incised pupils, and fleshy jowls. Likewise, his scrupulous attention to textural variation is reflected in the finely chased and stippled high collar, buttoned jacket, and long hair. This highly finished relief is a superlative example of early American bronze casting and was produced at the Ames Manufacturing Company in Chicopee, Massachusetts. The number of Franklin medallions cast by Ames is not documented; the Metropolitan's bronze is the only located example with a foundry mark. Brown's success with bronze casting inspired the next generation of American sculptors to opt more frequently for bronze instead of marble. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
DC
alb3724889 Marbleized Vase. Dated: 1935/1942. Dimensions: overall: 29.2 x 21.9 cm (11 1/2 x 8 5/8 in.). Medium: watercolor, graphite, and gouache on paperboard. Museum: National Gallery of Art, Washington DC. Author: JOHN HALL.
DC
alb2282896 Restoration style (Louis XVIII) burr elm fall front desk with chiselled and gilt bronze decoration and marble top, upper section open. France, first half 19th century. Detail of a keyhole. Location: PRIVATE COLLECTION.
DC
alb2283921 Restoration style (Louis XVIII) burr elm fall front desk with chiselled and gilt bronze decoration and marble top, upper section open. France, first half 19th century. Detail. Location: PRIVATE COLLECTION.
DC
alb2281133 Restoration style (Louis XVIII) burr elm fall front desk with chiselled and gilt bronze decoration and marble top, upper section open. France, first half 19th century. Detail. Location: PRIVATE COLLECTION.
DC
alb2055663 Pair of vases decorated with faux marble, caryatids and garlands in relief, ceramic, Del Vecchio manufacture, Naples. Italy, 19th century. Location: Naples, Museo Artistico Industriale Filippo Palizzi (Arts And Crafts Museum).
DC
alb5106315 Cobham Hall, Kent: Section of the Audit Room at Earl Darnley's, James Wyatt, 17461813, British, ca. 1790, Graphite, blue and gray wash, pen and brown and black ink on thick, moderately textured, beige laid paper, Sheet: 19 3/4 x 14 1/4 inches (50.2 x 36.2 cm), architectural subject, audits, doors, fireplaces, mantels, marble, sections, windows, Cobham, Cobham Hall, England, Kent, United Kingdom.
DC
alb5103339 Hinton St. George, Somerset: Plan of the East Dining Room, James Wyatt, 17461813, British, 1811, Graphite and pen and black ink on thick, moderately textured, cream laid paper and masking tape, verso, upper center, Sheet: 15 1/8 x 21 3/4 inches (38.4 x 55.2 cm), architectural subject, carpet, dining room, marble, plans (drawings), sideboard, windows, England, Europe, Hinton St George, Somerset, United Kingdom.
DC
alb5100266 Cobham Hall, Kent: Section of a Room, James Wyatt, 17461813, British, ca. 1790, Graphite, pen and black ink and watercolor on moderately thick, slightly textured, cream laid paper, Sheet: 14 7/8 x 20 1/4 inches (37.8 x 51.4 cm), architectural subject, doors, fireplaces, marble, plans (drawings), sections, windows, Cobham, Cobham Hall, England, Kent, United Kingdom.
DC
alb5093196 Design for the Staircase at Stratford Place, James Wyatt, 17461813, British, undated, Pen and black ink, yellow and gray washes; (verso) graphite on moderately thick, moderately textured, cream laid paper with one fold mark, Sheet: 16 1/2 x 23 1/8 inches (41.9 x 58.7 cm), architectural subject, columns (architectural elements), crest, dome, drawing room, festoons, halls, marble, molding, Neoclassical, parlor, roundels, staircase, stairs, urn, water closets, England, Europe, London, Mayfair, United Kingdom.
DC
alb5092324 Cobham Hall, Kent: Elevation of Fireplace and Overmantel, James Wyatt, 17461813, British, ca. 1790, Graphite, pen and black ink and watercolor on moderatly thick, slightly textured, cream wove paper with six fold marks, Sheet: 10 5/8 x 16 3/4 inches (27 x 42.5 cm), architectural subject, elevations (drawings), fireplace, frames (furnishings), marble, molding, shadow, wall, Cobham, Cobham Hall, England, Kent, United Kingdom.
DC
alb5085191 Cobham Hall, Kent: Section of the drawing room, James Wyatt, 17461813, British, ca. 1790, Watercolor and pink and gray wash, over pen, black ink and graphite on moderately thick, moderately textured, cream laid paper, Sheet: 14 x 19 3/4 inches (35.6 x 50.2 cm), architectural subject, birds, crests, doors, drawing room, fireplace, mantels, marble, sections, urn, windows, Cobham, Cobham Hall, England, Kent, United Kingdom.
DC
alb5079975 Cobham Hall, Kent: Section of the Anteroom, James Wyatt, 17461813, British, ca. 1790, Graphite, pen and black and brown ink and watercolor on thick, moderately textured, cream wove paper, Sheet: 14 1/2 x 19 3/4 inches (36.8 x 50.2 cm), architectural subject, doors, fireplaces, marble, windows, Cobham, Cobham Hall, England, Kent, United Kingdom.
DC
alb3241511 Twisted column, facade of the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Assumption, Siena (UNESCO World Heritage List, 1995), Tuscany. Italy, 13th-14th century. Detail.
DC
alb3152013 Marble floor, detail, Hadrian's villa, 2nd century AD, Tivoli, Lazio, Italy.
DC
alb3149457 Marble floor, detail, Hadrian's villa, 2nd century AD, Tivoli, Lazio, Italy.
DC
alb3149150 Marble floor, detail, Hadrian's villa, 2nd century AD, Tivoli, Lazio, Italy.
DC
alb3148244 Marble floor, detail, Hadrian's villa, 2nd century AD, Tivoli, Lazio, Italy.
DC
alb3149533 Marble floor, detail, Hadrian's villa, 2nd century AD, Tivoli, Lazio, Italy.
DC
alb3147135 Marble floor, detail, Hadrian's villa, 2nd century AD, Tivoli, Lazio, Italy.
DC
alb3146859 Marble floor, detail, Hadrian's villa, 2nd century AD, Tivoli, Lazio, Italy.
DC
alb3142071 Marble floor, detail, Hadrian's villa, 2nd century AD, Tivoli, Lazio, Italy.
DC
alb3146187 Marble floor, detail, Hadrian's villa, 2nd century AD, Tivoli, Lazio, Italy.
DC
alb3142307 Marble floor, detail, Hadrian's villa, 2nd century AD, Tivoli, Lazio, Italy.
DC
alb3143599 Marble floor, detail, Hadrian's villa, 2nd century AD, Tivoli, Lazio, Italy.
DC
alb3144515 Marble floor, detail, Hadrian's villa, 2nd century AD, Tivoli, Lazio, Italy.
DC
alb5018192 A loom weight of unbaked clay, semi-circular in shape with a smoothed round bottom. Drilled in the middle around the length (diameter through hole: 1.7 cm). Made by hand. The clay is light brown in color, has a coarse texture and is marbled with lime, fine sand and some small stones., Tools, earthenware, clay, L 7.5 cm, W 7.3 cm, H 7.4 cm, Jordan.
DC
alb4972488 Loose earthenware fragments belonging to a so-called holemouth jar. The shoulders are bent inwards. The edge is inwards and is flat finished. On the inside of the edge a small ledge. Made by hand. The clay is gray in color, has a hard texture and is marbled with large parts of quartzite and red inclusions. On the outside a beige coating with friction traces. The surface is discolored brown-gray by fire. Some flakes of the surface are missing. On the inside an orange-brown coating with light brown dirt and gray traces of fire., Crockery, earthenware, D 16 cm, Iron Age II 925-539 BC, Jordan.
DC
alb3638531 Saint Agnes (one of a pair). Culture: Spanish, possibly Aragon. Dimensions: Overall (confirmed): H. 20 1/4 x W. 20 1/2 x D. 4 7/8 in. (51.4 x 52.1 x 12.4 cm);Diameter (historic dimensions, superceded): 21 in. (53.3 cm). Maker: Possibly by Diego de Tiedra (Spanish, died 1559). Date: mid-16th century.These roundels (see also 27.112) from the Conde de Las Almenas collection in Madrid were separated after auction in New York in 1927 but reunited in the Museum a few years later. They may have been part of a larger series, since there is no reason -- biblical or historical -- to show Saint Agnes and Saint Jerome together (the pairing may reflect the patrons' given names, however). Both Agnes and Jerome were popular subjects in the religious art of Spain. Jerome is shown, pen in hand, writing a book, presumably his Latin translation of the Bible, known as the Vulgate. His robe has the ermine-fringed collar of a cardinal and his hat hangs on the wall behind him; the head and a paw of the lion he befriended after extracting a thorn peek out beneath his arm. The virgin martyr Agnes holds her attribute, a lamb. Jerome is often depicted alone, but since he was one of the Four Fathers, or Doctors, of the Church, he may originally have been joined by three male saints and four female saints, to make a series of eight. Whether as a pair or as many as eight, the roundels could have been decorations for one of the large retables, or altar shelves, that filled churches during this period, but their sumptuous nature would also have suited a palace. The richly carved and painted garlands of fruit and flowers, a type of ornament popularized in glazed terracotta work by the Della Robbias in Italy and widely imitated in Europe, would have brought the saints into harmony with a secular interior.As a medium for sculpture, alabaster was often used in northeastern Spain, where it was quarried.[1] Even such a costly material as alabaster was frequently painted in the Renaissance. While the natural beauty of the stone is left unadorned in the carefully chiseled striations of Jerome's sleeves, the fur of his cloak, or the billows of Agnes's dress, most of the reliefs' surfaces have been defined by color. Dark green leaves contrast with white and red fruit and flowers in the garlands; carnation hues blush on Agnes's cheeks and gold highlights her tresses, while tones of black emphasize Jerome's gnarled beard; and gilding picks out the hems and ermine tails of their robes. Without pigment, the windmill and low-relief landscape behind Agnes would lack visual clarity. Spanish wood sculpture was routinely painted, and the roles of entallador (carver) or escultor (sculptor) were clearly separated from that of the encarnador (painter of flesh tones) or estofador (painter of draperies). While wooden sculpture was completely covered with paint and required the hand of several specialists, alabaster was more selectively painted, and possibly a single artist -- quite likely not the carver -- was responsible for the coloring here. Diego de Siloé's Virgin and Child (ca. 1519 - 28, Victoria and Albert Museum, London) is another example of the partial painting of alabaster: only hair, drapery, and facial features received coats of pigment. The carving of these roundels is most attractive, and the coloration complements rather than detracts from the sculptor's skill. Jerome's bony fingers and gaunt cheekbones deliberately contrast with the voluptuous smoothness of Agnes's flesh. The textures of their hair and the swelling forms of the fruit were brilliantly rendered by chisel first, and only then enhanced by the painter's finesse. Both sculptor and painter must have delighted in the trompe l'oeil fly that has just landed on Jerome's book. Jerome's torso, bursting from the garland's confines, reflects trends of Mannerist art in Spain in the middle of the sixteenth century. Stylistic traits and material clues (such as the use of alabaster) suggest that the roundels were made in the region of Aragon. James Rorimer thought that Damián Forment, a famous Spanish sixteenth-century artist active in Poblet, Huesca, and Saragossa might have executed them.[2] Other scholars have offered attributions to sculptors less well known than Forment. John Goldsmith Phillips found similarities between them and sculptural work on the sacristy doors of Cuenca Cathedral, which Manuel Gómez-Moreno thought were possibly by Diego de Tiedra.[3] Although none of these attributions has been agreed upon, recent scholars have continued to locate the roundels' place of origin in Aragon rather than Castile.[4][Ian Wardropper. European Sculpture, 1400-1900, In the Metropolitan Museum of Art. New York, 2011, no. 22, pp. 74-76.]Footnotes:[1] Marjorie Trusted. Spanish Sculpture: Catalogue of the Post-medieval Spanish Sculpture in Wood, Terracotta, Alabaster, Marble, Stone, Lead and Jet in the Victoria and Albert Museum. London, 1996, p. 11.[2] James R. Rorimer. "A Sixteenth-Century Alabaster by Damian Forment." Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin 23, no. 12 (December 1928), pp. 309-11. [3] John Goldsmith Phillips. "A Sixteenth-Century Spanish Sculpture." Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin 29, no. 4 (April 1934), pp. 68-69, p. 68; Manuel Gómez-Moreno. Renaissance Sculpture in Spain. Translated by Bernard Bevan. Florence, 1931. [Reprint ed., New York, 1971. Originally published as La escultura del Renacimiento en España. Florence, 1931.], pp. 56 - 57, pl. 49.[4] Marjorie Trusted, oral communication and letter of 2010 in the curatorial files of the Department of Sculpture and Decorative Arts, Metropolitan Museum. Manuel Arias, deputy director of the Museo Nacional de Escultura, Colegio de San Gregorio, Valladolid, kindly confirmed that in his opinion the reliefs date from 1500 to 1550 and are likely to have been made in Aragon (communication of summer 2010). Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
DC
alb3638256 The Banker's Table. Artist: William Michael Harnett (1848-1892). Dimensions: 8 x 12 in. (20.3 x 30.5 cm). Date: 1877.In a departure from the fruits and vegetables Harnett painted at the outset of his career, this tabletop still life represents manufactured objects. The leather-bound volumes, stained ink bottle, and much-used quill pen show "the mellowing effect of age," which the artist praised in an undated interview. The varied objects reveal Harnett's skill in rendering different textures. Although the rolled coins and other currency probably determined the title, there is nothing in the work or its history to indicate that it was commissioned by or painted for a particular banker. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
DC
alb3637626 Saint Jerome (one of a pair). Culture: Spanish, possibly Aragon. Dimensions: Overall (confirmed): H. 20 5/8 x D. 4 1/4 in. (52.4 x 10.8 cm); Diam. 21 in. (53.3 cm). Date: mid-16th century.These roundels (see also 34.34) from the Conde de Las Almenas collection in Madrid were separated after auction in New York in 1927 but reunited in the Museum a few years later. They may have been part of a larger series, since there is no reason -- biblical or historical -- to show Saint Agnes and Saint Jerome together (the pairing may reflect the patrons' given names, however). Both Agnes and Jerome were popular subjects in the religious art of Spain. Jerome is shown, pen in hand, writing a book, presumably his Latin translation of the Bible, known as the Vulgate. His robe has the ermine-fringed collar of a cardinal and his hat hangs on the wall behind him; the head and a paw of the lion he befriended after extracting a thorn peek out beneath his arm. The virgin martyr Agnes holds her attribute, a lamb. Jerome is often depicted alone, but since he was one of the Four Fathers, or Doctors, of the Church, he may originally have been joined by three male saints and four female saints, to make a series of eight. Whether as a pair or as many as eight, the roundels could have been decorations for one of the large retables, or altar shelves, that filled churches during this period, but their sumptuous nature would also have suited a palace. The richly carved and painted garlands of fruit and flowers, a type of ornament popularized in glazed terracotta work by the Della Robbias in Italy and widely imitated in Europe, would have brought the saints into harmony with a secular interior.As a medium for sculpture, alabaster was often used in northeastern Spain, where it was quarried.[1] Even such a costly material as alabaster was frequently painted in the Renaissance. While the natural beauty of the stone is left unadorned in the carefully chiseled striations of Jerome's sleeves, the fur of his cloak, or the billows of Agnes's dress, most of the reliefs' surfaces have been defined by color. Dark green leaves contrast with white and red fruit and flowers in the garlands; carnation hues blush on Agnes's cheeks and gold highlights her tresses, while tones of black emphasize Jerome's gnarled beard; and gilding picks out the hems and ermine tails of their robes. Without pigment, the windmill and low-relief landscape behind Agnes would lack visual clarity. Spanish wood sculpture was routinely painted, and the roles of entallador (carver) or escultor (sculptor) were clearly separated from that of the encarnador (painter of flesh tones) or estofador (painter of draperies). While wooden sculpture was completely covered with paint and required the hand of several specialists, alabaster was more selectively painted, and possibly a single artist -- quite likely not the carver -- was responsible for the coloring here. Diego de Siloé's Virgin and Child (ca. 1519 - 28, Victoria and Albert Museum, London) is another example of the partial painting of alabaster: only hair, drapery, and facial features received coats of pigment. The carving of these roundels is most attractive, and the coloration complements rather than detracts from the sculptor's skill. Jerome's bony fingers and gaunt cheekbones deliberately contrast with the voluptuous smoothness of Agnes's flesh. The textures of their hair and the swelling forms of the fruit were brilliantly rendered by chisel first, and only then enhanced by the painter's finesse. Both sculptor and painter must have delighted in the trompe l'oeil fly that has just landed on Jerome's book. Jerome's torso, bursting from the garland's confines, reflects trends of Mannerist art in Spain in the middle of the sixteenth century. Stylistic traits and material clues (such as the use of alabaster) suggest that the roundels were made in the region of Aragon. James Rorimer thought that Damián Forment, a famous Spanish sixteenth-century artist active in Poblet, Huesca, and Saragossa might have executed them.[2] Other scholars have offered attributions to sculptors less well known than Forment. John Goldsmith Phillips found similarities between them and sculptural work on the sacristy doors of Cuenca Cathedral, which Manuel Gómez-Moreno thought were possibly by Diego de Tiedra.[3] Although none of these attributions has been agreed upon, recent scholars have continued to locate the roundels' place of origin in Aragon rather than Castile.[4][Ian Wardropper. European Sculpture, 1400-1900, In the Metropolitan Museum of Art. New York, 2011, no. 23, pp. 74-76.]Footnotes:[1] Marjorie Trusted. Spanish Sculpture: Catalogue of the Post-medieval Spanish Sculpture in Wood, Terracotta, Alabaster, Marble, Stone, Lead and Jet in the Victoria and Albert Museum. London, 1996, p. 11.[2] James R. Rorimer. "A Sixteenth-Century Alabaster by Damian Forment." Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin 23, no. 12 (December 1928), pp. 309-11. [3] John Goldsmith Phillips. "A Sixteenth-Century Spanish Sculpture." Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin 29, no. 4 (April 1934), pp. 68-69, p. 68; Manuel Gómez-Moreno. Renaissance Sculpture in Spain. Translated by Bernard Bevan. Florence, 1931. [Reprint ed., New York, 1971. Originally published as La escultura del Renacimiento en España. Florence, 1931.], pp. 56 - 57, pl. 49.[4] Marjorie Trusted, oral communication and letter of 2010 in the curatorial files of the Department of Sculpture and Decorative Arts, Metropolitan Museum. Manuel Arias, deputy director of the Museo Nacional de Escultura, Colegio de San Gregorio, Valladolid, kindly confirmed that in his opinion the reliefs date from 1500 to 1550 and are likely to have been made in Aragon (communication of summer 2010). Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
DC
alb3611498 A Young Warrior. Artist: Tullio Lombardo (Italian, ca. 1455-1532) , and workshop. Culture: Italian, Venice. Dimensions: Overall (wt. confirmed): 34 1/2 × 21 (12 1/2 in. at base) × 14 in., 250 lb., (87.6 × 53.3 × 35.6 cm (31.8 cm), 113.4 kg). Date: 1490s.This youth clad in antique-styled armor may represent Saint George or Saint Theodore, Christian warriors who were especially venerated in Venice. He would have led a lance in his right hand and may have guarded a tomb. His energetic pose, twist of his head, and tensely held arms convey the alertness required of a guardian figure. Truthfulness to classical examples was esteemed in Renaissance Venice; this sculptor paid particular attention to rendering the delicately textured scrolling vines that decorate the breastplate, and even carved the laces that hold the metal sleeves together. He left the back unfinished, which indicates it was originally installed in a niche or against a wall. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
DC
alb4878489 Unknown Artist, Portrait Head of Emperor Antoninus Pius, ca. 138-150, marble, 14 15/16 in. x 8 3/16 in. x 8 11/16 in. (38 cm x 20.8 cm x 22.07 cm), This head of the emperor who succeeded Hadrian shows the unsurpassed technical skill of the Roman portraitists. A leading classical scholar has called it 'one of the finest imperial heads in marble in America.' The representation combines virility with refinement and intelligence with character. Virtuoso drill work in the hair and eyes creates a lively texture, which contrasts with the smooth polish of the skin.
DC
alb3609706 [Still Life with Fruit]. Artist: Roger Fenton (British, 1819-1869). Dimensions: 35.2 x 43.1cm (13 7/8 x 16 15/16in.)Mount: 46.6 x 60.3 cm (18 3/8 x 23 3/4 in.). Date: 1860.As the appointed photographer of the British Museum from 1854 to 1859, Fenton had ample opportunity to develop his skills photographing stationary objects of various sizes and materials, from antique busts to skeletons of animals and birds. In 1860, he embarked on a series of about forty still lifes of fruits and flowers arranged on marble or fabric. The presence of the same fruits in more than one image suggests that the studies were made during a relatively short period of time. In the best examples, flowers and fruit are grouped together in tight compositions, either in casual heaps or as a wall of berries and petals. Here, photographing at close range and at eye level, Fenton conceived of his subject as a study in textures, piling detail upon detail and heightening its tactile diversity: the prickly scales of the pineapple, the pocked skin of the strawberry, the delicate transparency of the white currant, the heaviness of the black grapes. The abundance of sensory information in the compressed photographic space attracts and disturbs at the same time, injecting a disquieting and characteristically Victorian horror vacui into a centuries-old theme.These overabundant, almost overripe, still lifes of objets d'art, flowers, and exotic fruits were also clearly meant to accomplish the same goal that Fenton had sought from the beginning: to demonstrate the capacity of photography to equal--and even surpass--painting in its many traditional roles. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
DC
alb3666072 Marble statue of a woman. Culture: Greek. Dimensions: Overall (H. w/ plinth): 68 1/8 in. (173 cm)H. (H. without plinth): 66 1/8 in. (168 cm). Date: 2nd half of the 4th century B.C..The lively, varied manner in which the texture of the clothing is rendered suggests that this is a Greek original rather than a Roman copy. The crinkly linen of the chiton and the heavier wool of the himation (cloak) are carefully differentiated, and horizontal press folds add variety to the latter's surface. The drilled holes on the sleeves once held metal buttons. The upper part of the chiton is kept firmly in place by a cord that is crossed in back and slipped over the arms. This over-life size figure probably represents a goddess, and in the absence of other attributes, the shoulder cord may offer a clue to her identity. Although the huntress Artemis is often shown with such a cord, this more matronly figure may represent Themis, a goddess associated with custom and law. The head and neck were carved separately and provided with a rounded tenon that was set into the cavity at the top of the torso. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
DC
alb3145243 Ancient marble blocks used to build Agia Panagia (church of the Virgin Mary), Lissos, Crete, Greece. Byzantine civilisation.
DC
alb3614595 Marble relief of a horseman. Culture: Greek. Dimensions: H. 18 in. (45.7 cm). Date: 1st century B.C..This relief of a pacing horse with a nude rider is a tour de force of almost excessively sensitive surface texture and exaggerated anatomical detail. Decorative showiness takes precedence over organic unity, in a style often found in classicizing works of the first century B.C. The piece may copy one that was well-known in antiquity, for two others are preserved that show an almost identical horseman followed by another rider on a horse with the same pacing gait. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
DC
alb3486321 Bacchanal: A Faun Teased by Children, ca. 1616–17, Italian, Rome, Marble, Overall (confirmed): H. 52 1/8 x W. 29 x D. 18 7/8 in., 529lb. (132.4 x 73.7 x 47.9 cm, 239.9528kg), Sculpture, Gian Lorenzo Bernini (Italian, Naples 1598–1680 Rome), and Pietro Bernini (Italian, 1562–1629), Gian Lorenzo Bernini was the heroic central figure in Italian Baroque sculpture. The influence of his father, the Florentine-born Pietro, can be seen here in the buoyant forms and cottony texture of the Bacchanal.
DC
alb3452700 Marble relief of a horseman, Late Hellenistic, 1st century B.C., Greek, Marble, Parian ?, H. 18 in. (45.7 cm), Stone Sculpture, This relief of a pacing horse with a nude rider is a tour de force of almost excessively sensitive surface texture and exaggerated anatomical detail. Decorative showiness takes precedence over organic unity, in a style often found in classicizing works of the first century B.
DC
alb3429209 Marble statue of a woman, Late Classical, 2nd half of the 4th century B.C., Greek, Marble, Overall (H. w/ plinth): 68 1/8 in. (173 cm), Stone Sculpture, The lively, varied manner in which the texture of the clothing is rendered suggests that this is a Greek original rather than a Roman copy. The crinkly linen of the chiton and the heavier wool of the himation (cloak) are carefully differentiated, and horizontal press folds add variety to the latter's surface.
DC
alb1512927 Description: Roman civilization, 1st century. Fragment of Tabula Iliaca Capitolina, marble, 25x28 cm. Scenes of the Trojan War, with Greek inscriptions, by Theodorus, from the Appian Way.. Location: ROMA, MUSEO CAPITOLINO.
DC
alb3146012 Description: Marble veining in a column, archaeological site of Lefki, Koufonissi island, Crete, Greece..
DC
alb2296855 Description: Minerals - Pyroaurite on marble.
DC

Total de Resultados: 76

Página 1 de 1