Listing 1 - 10 of 16 | << page >> |
Sort by
|
Choose an application
Choose an application
Painting --- attribution --- Bruegel, Pieter [Elder] --- Prado Museum [Madrid]
Choose an application
Art --- History as a science --- attribution --- connoisseurship --- art theory --- connoisseurs
Choose an application
Ce mémoire s'intéresse aux perceptions de justice de 89 cadres suite à l'évaluation annuelle de leurs performances au sein de la société Electrabel. Un questionnaire a été développé en vue d'examiner les relations entre la justice organisationnelle, la justice globale et le support organisationnel perçu. En outre, l'impact de ces variables sur l'implication professionnelle, sur l'engagement au travail, sur le stress, sur le sentiment d'auto-efficacité, ainsi que sur l'estime de soi organisationnelle a lui aussi été étudié.
Personnel (entreprise) --- Personnel --- Opinion individuelle --- Attribution --- Justice --- Performance professionnelle --- évaluation --- Personnel (entreprise) --- Personnel --- Opinion individuelle --- Attribution --- Justice --- Performance professionnelle --- évaluation
Choose an application
Choose an application
Painting --- History --- attribution --- mansportretten --- Vos, de, Maarten --- Louvre Museum [Paris] --- anno 1500-1599 --- Netherlands --- Belgium
Choose an application
carvings [visual works] --- attribution --- sculpting --- German Renaissance-Baroque styles --- Morelli method --- Petel, Georg
Choose an application
Connoisseurship has been neglected in recent academic writings yet new attributions and rediscoveries are still being made. Rubens has been credited with a number of rediscovered works, previously ascribed to his pupils and followers and now sold for record prices. Many are considered Rubens early works executed upon his return from Italy in 1608. "Samson and Delilah" (1609-10) rediscovered in 1929 by the German art historian Ludwig Burchard was bought by the London National Gallery in 1980. It differs from the engraved copy, the oil sketch and the miniature copy in the "Kunstkamer" (art cabinet) by Frans Francken II. Samsons left arm is too long, a fragment of his right foot is missing and there are five soldiers in the background rather than three. It was listed as a copy in the Antwerp inventory in 1655. The picture also has a number of technical anomalies. The inclusion of "Samson and Delilah" in the Rubens canon distorted it, and made way for similar style works. In 2001 another early painting by Rubens, the "Massacre of the Innocents", was rediscovered and sold for 49.5 million pounds at auction. Both paintings require efforts to consolidate their attributions and a number of exhibitions were organised with the help of the National Gallery. They are changing our perception of Rubenss early style. It is now characterized by a garish colouring, strong dark outlines and an overall crude impression. This style does not correspond with the more secure and more subtle works of the period: "The Adoration of the Magi, Susanna and the Elders" (both from Madrid), "The Real Presence of the Blessed Sacrament" or "The Raising of the Cross" (both from Antwerp). A reevaluation of Rubenss early years is therefore needed based on stylistic, historical and technological evidence. Standards of authenticity in Rubenss oeuvre should be raised along the lines of Rembrandt Research Project and old attributions scrutinised for inconsistencies and contradictions, with more in-depth study of major works acting as touchstones for future attributions.
attribution --- connoisseurship --- Samson en Delila --- Delila --- Burchard, Ludwig --- Samson --- Rubens, Peter Paul
Choose an application
attribution --- Ceres [Mythological character] --- Gerstenmaier, Hans Rudolf --- Hamen y León, van der, Juan --- Janssen, Abraham
Choose an application
attribution --- replicas --- offer van Abraham --- Dietrich, Christian Wilhelm Ernst --- Zick, Januarius
Listing 1 - 10 of 16 | << page >> |
Sort by
|