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Suez, Abou Simbel, Le Caire, Alger, Casablanca, Istanbul... Pour la première fois, des historiens de l'architecture et des conservateurs d'archives nous permettent d'accéder à un patrimoine culturel européen exceptionnel et méconnu : les archives produites par les entreprises du bâtiment et des travaux publics actives au sud de la Méditerranée, entre 1860 et 1970. Ouvrages d'art en acier ou béton armé, cités pour ouvriers et cadres expatriés, bâtiments publics mais aussi mobilier, décors, ouvrages effectués par des artisans d'art... Toutes ces réalisations témoignent d'une époque d'intenses échanges humains, techniques, et artistiques entre l'Europe et l'arc sud-est de la Méditerranée. Photographies anciennes destinées à promouvoir le travail des entrepreneurs, photographies de chantier, dessins d'architectes, croquis et carnets documentant les innovations techniques, plaquettes publicitaires... le livre est illustré par plus de 200 dessins et photographies provenant directement des fonds d'archives des constructeurs. Cet ouvrage est le résultat du projet de coopération transnationale "ARCHING : ARchives d'INGénierie européenne" (2010-2012) conduit dans le cadre du programme Culture 2007-2013 de la Commission européenne, auquel ont participé cinq institutions : l'Ecomusée du Bois-du-Luc (Belgique), la Cité de l'architecture et du patrimoine (France), InVisu (CNRS-INHA) (France), le Dipartimento di Architettura disegno-storia-progetto de l'université de Florence (Italie), Archmuseum (Turquie). Suez, Abu Simbel, Cairo, Algiers, Casablanca, Istanbul... This work of pioneering research by architectural historians and archivists gives us access to an exceptional field of European cultural heritage: the records of buildings and public works contractors active on the southern shores of the Mediterranean between 1860 and 1970. It covers all the construction trades, from steel or reinforced concrete bridges and dams, housing for laborers and expats, and public buildings,…
Architecture --- architecte --- entreprises de la construction --- architecture --- construction companies --- egyptomania --- historicism --- painting --- theater --- decorative arts --- heritage
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Egyptomania --- 7.049 --- Iconografie ; verschillende onderwerpen --- Europe --- Civilization --- Civilization [Western ] --- Egyptian influences --- Civilization, Western - Egyptian influences. --- Civilization, Western --- Civilization.
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The appearance of new media and its enormous diffusion in the last decades of the 20th century and up to the present has greatly increased and diversified the reception of Egyptian themes and motifs and Egyptian influence in various cultural spheres. So-called 'popular' or 'pop' culture (cinema, genre fiction, TV-series, comics, graffiti, computer and video games, rock and heavy music, radio serials, among others) often makes use of narratives and motifs drawn from the observation and study of ancient Egypt, updated and reinterpreted in various ways, and which is now the subject of study by scholars of Egyptology. The present monograph seeks to provide new evidence of this interdisciplinarity between Egyptology and popular culture. It explores the conscious reinterpretation of the past in the work of contemporary authors, who shape an image of the Egyptian reality that in each case is determined by their own circumstances and contexts.
History / Ancient / Egypt --- Social Science / Media Studies --- Social sciences --- Ancient Egypt --- Popular Culture --- Egyptomania --- Cultural Reception --- To 332 B.C. --- Egypt --- Égypte --- Egypt. --- Social life and customs --- In literature. --- Mythology --- In motion pictures. --- Mœurs et coutumes --- Dans la littérature.
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Cleopatra-a brave, astute, and charming woman who spoke many languages, entertained lavishly, hunted, went into battle, eliminated siblings to consolidate her power, and held off the threat of Imperial Rome to protect her country as long as she could-continues to fascinate centuries after she ruled Egypt. These wide-ranging essays explore such topics as Cleopatra's controversial trip to Rome, her suicide by snake bite, and the afterlife of her love potions. They view Cleopatra from the Egyptian perspective, and examine the reception in Rome of Egyptian culture, especially of its religion and architecture. They discuss films about her, and consider what inspired Egyptomania in early modern art. Together, these essays illuminate Cleopatra's legacy and illustrate how it has been used and reused through the centuries.
Queens --- Egypt, Ancient. --- Art, Ancient --- Egypt --- Architecture, Ancient --- Egypt. --- Religion. --- Cleopatra, --- Rome --- History --- Kings and rulers --- ancient egypt religion. --- ancient egypt. --- ancient egyptian architecture. --- ancient egyptian rulers. --- ancient egyptian women. --- ancient history. --- ancient pharaoh. --- ancient roman politics. --- ancient rome. --- classical studies. --- cleopatra afterlife. --- cleopatra and egypt. --- cleopatra and rome. --- cleopatra love potions. --- cleopatra vii. --- early modern art. --- egyptian culture. --- egyptian religion. --- egyptomania. --- historic women figures. --- imperial rome. --- life of cleopatra. --- political history. --- roman history. --- rome and egypt. --- women in history. --- Cléopâtre vii (reine d'égypte ; 0069-0030 av. j.-c.) --- Cléopâtre vii (reine d'égypte ; 0069-0030 av. j.-c.)
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"Illuminated with a wide variety of images, this book traces the long history of yellow around the world. In antiquity, yellow was considered a sacred color, a symbol of light, warmth, wealth, and prosperity. But in medieval Europe, it became highly ambivalent: greenish yellow came to signify demonic sulfur and bile, the color of forgers, felon knights, traitors, Judas, and Lucifer--while warm yellow recalled honey and gold, serving as a sign of joy, pleasure and abundance. The yellow stars of the Holocaust were seared into the color's negative tradition. In Europe today, yellow has diminished to a discreet color. Greenish yellow can still be seen as dangerous, sickly, or poisonous, and golden yellow remains positive, but the color is absent in much of everyday life and is lacking in symbolism. In Asia, however, yellow pigments like ocher and orpiment and dyes like saffron, curcuma, and gaude are abundant. Painting and dyeing in this color has been easier than in Europe, offering a richer and more varied palette of yellows that has granted the color a more positive meaning. In ancient China, for example, yellow clothing was reserved for the emperor. In India, the color is seen as a source of happiness: wearing a little yellow is believed to keep evil away. And importantly, it is the color of Buddhism, whose temple doors are marked with the color. Yellow continues to have different meanings in different cultural traditions, but in most, the color remains associated with light and sun, something that can be seen from afar and that seems warm and always in motion"--
Jaune dans l'art. --- Symbolisme des couleurs --- Couleur --- Jaune. --- Yellow in art. --- Symbolism of colors --- Color --- Yellow. --- Histoire. --- Aspect social --- Aspect psychologique --- History. --- Social aspects --- Psychological aspects --- Adage. --- Adjective. --- Athanasius Kircher. --- Beige. --- Bible Historiale. --- Blond. --- Cagot. --- Caravaggio. --- Chivalric romance. --- Church Fathers. --- Classical Latin. --- Clothing. --- Coat of arms. --- Courtly love. --- Cubism. --- Degenerate art. --- Demagogue. --- Dionysus. --- Dyeing. --- Egyptomania. --- Etymology. --- Eurystheus. --- Facsimile. --- Fauvism. --- Gold leaf. --- Grandes Chroniques de France. --- Grisaille. --- Hebrews. --- Heraldry. --- Iconography. --- Impressionism. --- Iseult. --- Jan Hus. --- Jan Steen. --- Jean Chardin. --- Lacquer. --- Ludwig Wittgenstein. --- Medieval Latin. --- Middle French. --- Naples yellow. --- Nibelungenlied. --- Ochre. --- On the Eve. --- Orpiment. --- Paul Gauguin. --- Paul Klee. --- Philip II of Macedon. --- Pigment. --- Pope Innocent III. --- Prostitution. --- Red hair. --- Rococo. --- Roman Empire. --- Roman de Fauvel. --- Roman sculpture. --- Silver age. --- Simon Vouet. --- Sumptuary law. --- Superiority (short story). --- Talc. --- The Other Hand. --- The Philosopher. --- The Tables of the Law. --- The Various. --- Trickster. --- Urine. --- Victor Hugo. --- Vinegar. --- Yellow Peril. --- Yellow journalism. --- Language and languages --- Gold-leaf. --- Psychology. --- Psychological aspects.
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A unique phenomenon in the history of art, Egyptomania was born at the juncture of science and imagination. It draws its substance from scholarly knowledge about ancient Egypt, from the lore transmitted by travellers and writers, and from the repertory of myths and symbols thus generated. Egyptomania first appeared in Roman times, underwent a revival in the sixteenth century, and strengthened its hold in the eighteenth - its power to seduce the artistic imagination endures to our day. It numbers among its conquests Piranese, Hope, Turner, Wedgwood, Cartier, and Lalique. Ancient Egypt's fascination extends to all the arts : architecture, interior design, furniture, decorative arts, sculpture, painting, theatre, and film. No genre has escaped its influence. The sheer scale of the movement defies any attempt at inclusivity. Egyptomania, an exhibition jointly organized by the National Gallery of Canada and the Musee du Louvre, offers a representative selection of masterworks from around the world. They have been arranged side by side with several exceptional antique works, allowing us to consider the role of copy and interpretation, to follow the evolution of Egyptomania in relation to the progress of Egyptology, and above all, to admire the creative products of the phenomenon. Centuries pass and fashions change, but ancient Egypt continues to cast its spell with astonishing vitality and force.
Iconography --- anno 1800-1999 --- anno 1700-1799 --- Egypt --- orientalisme --- Egyptische kunst --- oudheid --- 1730 - 1930 --- 18de eeuw --- 19de eeuw --- 20ste eeuw --- Egypte --- Egyptomania --- Egyptische invloeden --- 7.041 --- (069) --- [Comm. de l'exposition et auteurs du catalogue] Jean-Marcel Humbert, Michel Pantazzi, Christiane Ziegler --- kunst --- achttiende eeuw --- negentiende eeuw --- twintigste eeuw --- neostijlen --- egyptomanie --- architectuur --- beeldhouwkunst --- design --- kunstnijverheid --- textiel --- keramiek --- schilderkunst --- tekenkunst --- grafiek --- theater --- opera --- scenografie --- 7.03 --- CDL --- Iconografie ; de mens, portretten --- (Musea. Collecties) --- Exhibitions --- Egyptian Revival (Art) --- Art, Modern --- Néo-égyptien (Art) --- Art --- Exhibitions. --- Expositions --- Néo-égyptien (Art) --- Egyptian revival (Art) --- Art, Egyptian --- Egyptian art --- Neoclassicism (Art) --- Influence --- Égypte --- Ägypten --- Egitto --- Egipet --- Egiptos --- Miṣr --- Southern Region (United Arab Republic) --- Egyptian Region (United Arab Republic) --- Iqlīm al-Janūbī (United Arab Republic) --- Egyptian Territory (United Arab Republic) --- Egipat --- Arab Republic of Egypt --- A.R.E. --- ARE (Arab Republic of Egypt) --- Jumhūrīyat Miṣr al-ʻArabīyah --- Mitsrayim --- Egipt --- Ijiptʻŭ --- Misri --- Ancient Egypt --- Gouvernement royal égyptien --- جمهورية مصر العربية --- مِصر --- مَصر --- Maṣr --- Khēmi --- エジプト --- Ejiputo --- Egypti --- Egypten --- מצרים --- United Arab Republic --- 1730 - 1930. --- 18de eeuw. --- 19de eeuw. --- 20ste eeuw. --- Egypte. --- Egypte dans l'art
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