Lingua: Inglese
Editore: Metropolitan Museum of Art, The, 1980
ISBN 10: 0870992295 ISBN 13: 9780870992292
Da: Better World Books, Mishawaka, IN, U.S.A.
Condizione: Good. Former library book; may include library markings. Used book that is in clean, average condition without any missing pages.
EUR 5,00
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Aggiungi al carrelloLeinen mit Schutzumschlag. Condizione: Sehr gut. 309 S. : zahlr. Ill. (z.T. farb.), graph. Darst., Kt. ; 24 cm Noch originalverpackt, daher keine näheren Angaben zu Auflage/Jahr/Paginierung möglich, Kanten gering bestossen /// Standort Wimregal FLK7-6038 ISBN 9783444060076 Sprache: Deutsch Gewicht in Gramm: 620 Neuausg. in 1 Bd. : mit Reiseführer im Anh.
Hardcover. Condizione: Very Good. Text clean and solid; no dust jacket; Spatantike-Fruhes Christentum-Byzanz; 8vo 8" - 9" tall; 220 pages.
Da: Antiquariat Matthias Wagner, Berlin, Germania
Membro dell'associazione: GIAQ
EUR 21,70
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Aggiungi al carrelloHardcover. Sehr guter Zustand. BITTE BEACHTEN: KEIN VERSAND AUSSERHALB EU - PLEASE NOTE: NO SHIPPING OUTSIDE EUROPEAN UNION. Leinen mit Schutzumschlag, 311 Seiten, mit zahlreichen Abbildungen. 29 x 22 cm. Gewicht: 2000.
Editore: Sandoz Ltd, 1967
Da: GREENSLEEVES BOOKS, Oxford, Regno Unito
EUR 11,80
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Aggiungi al carrelloPaperback. Condizione: Very Good. . 1967, clean copy, no markings, Professional booksellers since 1981.
hardcover. Condizione: New.
hardcover. Condizione: Very Good. With very good dust jacket. Very Good hardcover with light shelfwear - NICE! Oversized.
Lingua: Tedesco
Editore: Berg, Hallwag Verlag,, 1979
Da: Hans Kümmerle - Antiquariat, Goeppingen, BW, Germania
Membro dell'associazione: BOEV
EUR 5,50
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Aggiungi al carrelloMit zahlreichen teils farbigen Abbildungen, 309 S., Sprache: Deutsch Gewicht in Gramm: 747 23,5 x 14 cm, Ppbd., Su. Gut erhalten.
Lingua: Tedesco
Editore: Bern u. Stuttgart, Hallwag, (c) 1975., 1975
ISBN 10: 3444060181 ISBN 13: 9783444060182
Da: B.H.HERMES, Berlin, Germania
EUR 5,00
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Aggiungi al carrelloPaperback. Condizione: Gut. 124 S., s/w kart-Skizzen und Grundriss-Zeichn., 24 cm Leichte Lese- und Lagerspuren. Schönes Exemplar (Geo.As.) Geo.As. ISBN 3444060181 Sprache: Deutsch Gewicht in Gramm: 230.
0 311 p. Includes illustrations. Fine in very good dust jacket. light shelf wear.
Lingua: Tedesco
Editore: Bern ; Stuttgart : Hallwag, 1979
ISBN 10: 3444060076 ISBN 13: 9783444060076
Da: Antiquariat + Buchhandlung Bücher-Quell, Greifenstein-Allendorf, Germania
EUR 13,00
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Aggiungi al carrello309 S. Zahlr. Ill. (z.T. farb.), graph. Darst., Kt. Gr. 8°. OPpbd. (Leinenstruktur) mit SU. Zustand: noch sehr gut erhalten. (Das Hallwag-Reisebuch für Anspruchsvolle).
Lingua: Inglese
Editore: Dr. Ludwig Reichert Verlag, 2010
ISBN 10: 389500703X ISBN 13: 9783895007033
Da: Dr. L. Reichert Verlag, Wiesbaden, Germania
EUR 29,90
Quantità: 5 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloHardcover. Condizione: Neu. Spätantike - Frühes Christentum - Byzanz 220 S. 106 s/w Abb./ill. b/w, 37 farbige Abb./ill. (color), 600 g. This book deals with the apse as a showcase for images in the early Christian and early Byzantine periods. Two opposed traditions, harking back to early imperial times, nourished the invention of the Christian apse image: on the one hand there were statues in apses of pagan temples and imperial cult rooms which were venerated during cult ceremonies, on the other hand, there were apse mosaics in nymphaea where aquatic myths and figures celebrated the amenities of water. Christian apse mosaics originated within this context and in spite of the Old Testament prohibition of the image. Mosaics and frescoes in apses of cult rooms generated very particular effects, evoking in the viewer respect, admiration, awe and maybe even veneration. The capacity of the image to have an impact on the viewer could not be decreed by the Church, but this was an affair manifested more or less casually according to the inventive power of the artist. This book explores the interactions between the various image-media during the early Christian and early Byzantine periods; it particularly investigates the participation of the viewer and of the patron.
Hardcover. Condizione: new. Hardcover. This book deals with the apse as a showcase for images in the early Christian and early Byzantine periods. Two opposed traditions, harking back to early imperial times, nourished the invention of the Christian apse image: on the one hand there were statues in apses of pagan temples and imperial cult rooms which were venerated during cult ceremonies, on the other hand, there were apse mosaics in nymphaea where aquatic myths and figures celebrated the amenities of water. Christian apse mosaics originated within this context and in spite of the Old Testament prohibition of the image. The functions and effects of apse mosaics in Christian cult rooms were explored step by step and invented afresh. The participants of this delicate process of Christian image inventions were not only ecclesiastical but also private patrons. Without any qualm, emperors and representatives of the ruling class decorated their mausolea (S. Costanza in Rome, S. Aquilino in Milan) and representational rooms in villas (Centcelles) with Christian images. Because of the Mosaic prohibition of images, the Church could not attribute to the image a biblically grounded role, it behaved cautiously towards the decoration of churches with images during the fourth century. Only during the fifth century did it relax, and start to invent high brow theological programs (S. Maria Maggiore in Rome), understandable only to few believers. Some bishops gave special treatment to the promotion of aniconic programs (Paulinus of Nola, baptistery of the Lateran in Rome, Casaranello, church of Paraskevi in Salonica). Others rejected images in churches categorically (Epiphanius of Salamis). The Church admitted images and programs representing and portrayed Jesus Christ as God and as a human being that private patrons and artists had invented together with theologians; it provoked thereby a conflict (never really argued out) between the pagan representation of gods and emperors and the representation of Christ whose image should never recall images of gods nor of emperors, though points of contact were unavoidable. Highly original creations of apse mosaics resulted from this fertile conflict that were never repeated. All early Christian apse mosaics are unprecedented, one of creations without any succession. Their treatment as iconographic types is a blind ally. The Church sat back and watched how mosaics and frescoes in apses of cult rooms generated very particular effects, evoking in the viewer respect, admiration, awe and maybe even veneration. The representation of the Virgin with the child in a large apse evoked something like visual worship. The capacity of the image to have an impact on the viewer could not be decreed by the Church, but this was an affair manifested more or less casually according to the inventive power of the artist. For several centuries, the Church was not in a situation to create an official image of Christ. It cared for having apse mosaics not being adored. But the Church could not prevent images from being adored by private persons and/or control private concerns, such as setting-up of ex votos, in official church apses (S. Venanzio in Rome). Private persons first launched the cult of the Virgin (sarcophagus of Adelphia, gold glass). From the sixth century on, images - apse-mosaics, frescoes and panel paintings - were installed for 'cult-propaganda' (SS. Cosma e Damiano, Hag. Demetrius in Salonica). In some cases, perhaps, images promoted a devotion on the part of the private believers. This process was a novelty for the sixth century. But a real cult around an apse mosaic was never instituted, even though the altar for the celebration of the Mass was installed in the apse. The early Christian period had no interest in representing the sacrifice of the Mass in an apse mosaic. Official ecclesiastical prayers were not addressed to divine figures and Shipping may be from multiple locations in the US or from the UK, depending on stock availability.
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Aggiungi al carrelloCondizione: MOLTO BUONO. Propyläen Verlag cm.16,5x24, pp.354, legatura editoriale cartonata con sopraccoperta. Propyläen Kunstgeschichte. Supplementband.
Lingua: Inglese
Editore: Dr. Ludwig Reichert Verlag, 2010
ISBN 10: 389500703X ISBN 13: 9783895007033
Da: Kennys Bookshop and Art Galleries Ltd., Galway, GY, Irlanda
EUR 64,15
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Aggiungi al carrelloCondizione: New. 2010. Hardcover. . . . . .
Editore: Zürich, Belser Verlag,, 1987
Da: Antiquariat Hartmut R. Schreyer, Augsburg, Germania
EUR 36,00
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Aggiungi al carrello311 S. : zahlr. Illustr. ; 29 cm. Orig.-Leinen m. OU. Codex Benedictus ; Wiss. Erg.-Bd. - Belser-Faksimile-Editionen aus der Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana. - (gut erhalten).
Editore: Zürich, Belser Verlag,, 1987
Da: Antiquariat Hartmut R. Schreyer, Augsburg, Germania
EUR 36,00
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Aggiungi al carrello311 S. : zahlr. Illustr. ; 29 cm. Orig.-Leinen m. OU. Codex Benedictus ; Wiss. Erg.-Bd. - Belser-Faksimile-Editionen aus der Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana. - (gut erhalten).
Editore: Belser, Zürich, 1987
Da: Antiquariat Stefan Krüger, Essen, NRW, Germania
EUR 30,00
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Aggiungi al carrelloLeinen. 311 S. Oln. OU. Umschlag mit winzigem Einriss. Buch.
Da: Windows Booksellers, Eugene, OR, U.S.A.
Casebound Hardcover. VG, board corners bumped. 106 color and black and white plates 131 pp.
EUR 34,52
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Aggiungi al carrelloGebunden. Condizione: New. This book deals with the apse as a showcase for images in the early Christian and early Byzantine periods. Two opposed traditions, harking back to early imperial times, nourished the invention of the Christian apse image: on the one hand there were statues .
Lingua: Inglese
Editore: Dr. Ludwig Reichert Verlag, 2010
ISBN 10: 389500703X ISBN 13: 9783895007033
Da: Kennys Bookstore, Olney, MD, U.S.A.
Condizione: New. 2010. Hardcover. . . . . . Books ship from the US and Ireland.
Da: ACADEMIA Antiquariat an der Universität, Freiburg, Germania
Membro dell'associazione: BOEV
EUR 24,00
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Aggiungi al carrelloCondizione: Gut. Gebunden mit Schutzumschlag. Widmung auf Vorsatzblatt sonst sehr gut erhalten Sprache: Deutsch Gewicht in Gramm: 1445.
Lingua: Inglese
Editore: Reichert, Reichert Verlag Apr 2010, 2010
ISBN 10: 389500703X ISBN 13: 9783895007033
Da: AHA-BUCH GmbH, Einbeck, Germania
EUR 42,91
Quantità: 2 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloBuch. Condizione: Neu. Neuware - This book deals with the apse as a showcase for images in the early Christian and early Byzantine periods. Two opposed traditions, harking back to early imperial times, nourished the invention of the Christian apse image: on the one hand there were statues in apses of pagan temples and imperial cult rooms which were venerated during cult ceremonies, on the other hand, there were apse mosaics in nymphaea where aquatic myths and figures celebrated the amenities of water. Christian apse mosaics originated within this context and in spite of the Old Testament prohibition of the image. The functions and effects of apse mosaics in Christian cult rooms were explored step by step and invented afresh. The participants of this delicate process of Christian image inventions were not only ecclesiastical but also private patrons. Without any qualm, emperors and representatives of the ruling class decorated their mausolea (S. Costanza in Rome, S. Aquilino in Milan) and representational rooms in villas (Centcelles) with Christian images. Because of the Mosaïc prohibition of images, the Church could not attribute to the image a biblically grounded role, it behaved cautiously towards the decoration of churches with images during the fourth century. Only during the fifth century did it relax, and start to invent high brow theological programs (S. Maria Maggiore in Rome), understandable only to few believers. Some bishops gave special treatment to the promotion of aniconic programs (Paulinus of Nola, baptistery of the Lateran in Rome, Casaranello, church of Paraskevi in Salonica). Others rejected images in churches categorically (Epiphanius of Salamis). The Church admitted images and programs representing and portrayed Jesus Christ as God and as a human being that private patrons and artists had invented together with theologians; it provoked thereby a conflict (never really argued out) between the pagan representation of gods and emperors and the representation of Christ whose image should never recall images of gods nor of emperors, though points of contact were unavoidable. Highly original creations of apse mosaics resulted from this fertile conflict that were never repeated. All early Christian apse mosaics are unprecedented, one of creations without any succession. Their treatment as iconographic types is a blind ally.The Church sat back and watched how mosaics and frescoes in apses of cult rooms generated very particular effects, evoking in the viewer respect, admiration, awe and maybe even veneration. The representation of the Virgin with the child in a large apse evoked something like visual worship. The capacity of the image to have an impact on the viewer could not be decreed by the Church, but this was an affair manifested more or less casually according to the inventive power of the artist.For several centuries, the Church was not in a situation to create an official image of Christ. It cared for having apse mosaics not being adored. But the Church could not prevent images from being adored by private persons and/or control private concerns, such as setting-up of ex votos, in official church apses (S. Venanzio in Rome). Private persons first launched the cult of the Virgin (sarcophagus of Adelphia, gold glass). From the sixth century on, images - apse-mosaics, frescoes and panel paintings - were installed for 'cult-propaganda' (SS. Cosma e Damiano, Hag. Demetrius in Salonica). In some cases, perhaps, images promoted a devotion on the part of the private believers. This process was a novelty for the sixth century.But a real cult around an apse mosaic was never instituted, even though the altar for the celebration of the Mass was installed in the apse. The early Christian period had no interest in representing the sacrifice of the Mass in an apse mosaic. Official ecclesiastical prayers were not addressed to divine figures and saints represented in apse mosaics. Apse mosaics are never mentioned in liturgies. Apse mosaics.
Da: preigu, Osnabrück, Germania
EUR 39,05
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Aggiungi al carrelloBuch. Condizione: Neu. The Apse, the Image and the Icon | An Historical Perspective of the Apse as a Space for Images | Beat Brenk | Buch | Englisch | 2010 | Reichert | EAN 9783895007033 | Verantwortliche Person für die EU: Heil, Margaret, Margaret Heil, Reichert, Anne-Frank-Str. 11, 63762 Großostheim, margret-heil[at]gmx[dot]de | Anbieter: preigu.
hardcover. Condizione: New.
EUR 104,87
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloHardcover. Condizione: new. Hardcover. This book deals with the apse as a showcase for images in the early Christian and early Byzantine periods. Two opposed traditions, harking back to early imperial times, nourished the invention of the Christian apse image: on the one hand there were statues in apses of pagan temples and imperial cult rooms which were venerated during cult ceremonies, on the other hand, there were apse mosaics in nymphaea where aquatic myths and figures celebrated the amenities of water. Christian apse mosaics originated within this context and in spite of the Old Testament prohibition of the image. The functions and effects of apse mosaics in Christian cult rooms were explored step by step and invented afresh. The participants of this delicate process of Christian image inventions were not only ecclesiastical but also private patrons. Without any qualm, emperors and representatives of the ruling class decorated their mausolea (S. Costanza in Rome, S. Aquilino in Milan) and representational rooms in villas (Centcelles) with Christian images. Because of the Mosaic prohibition of images, the Church could not attribute to the image a biblically grounded role, it behaved cautiously towards the decoration of churches with images during the fourth century. Only during the fifth century did it relax, and start to invent high brow theological programs (S. Maria Maggiore in Rome), understandable only to few believers. Some bishops gave special treatment to the promotion of aniconic programs (Paulinus of Nola, baptistery of the Lateran in Rome, Casaranello, church of Paraskevi in Salonica). Others rejected images in churches categorically (Epiphanius of Salamis). The Church admitted images and programs representing and portrayed Jesus Christ as God and as a human being that private patrons and artists had invented together with theologians; it provoked thereby a conflict (never really argued out) between the pagan representation of gods and emperors and the representation of Christ whose image should never recall images of gods nor of emperors, though points of contact were unavoidable. Highly original creations of apse mosaics resulted from this fertile conflict that were never repeated. All early Christian apse mosaics are unprecedented, one of creations without any succession. Their treatment as iconographic types is a blind ally. The Church sat back and watched how mosaics and frescoes in apses of cult rooms generated very particular effects, evoking in the viewer respect, admiration, awe and maybe even veneration. The representation of the Virgin with the child in a large apse evoked something like visual worship. The capacity of the image to have an impact on the viewer could not be decreed by the Church, but this was an affair manifested more or less casually according to the inventive power of the artist. For several centuries, the Church was not in a situation to create an official image of Christ. It cared for having apse mosaics not being adored. But the Church could not prevent images from being adored by private persons and/or control private concerns, such as setting-up of ex votos, in official church apses (S. Venanzio in Rome). Private persons first launched the cult of the Virgin (sarcophagus of Adelphia, gold glass). From the sixth century on, images - apse-mosaics, frescoes and panel paintings - were installed for 'cult-propaganda' (SS. Cosma e Damiano, Hag. Demetrius in Salonica). In some cases, perhaps, images promoted a devotion on the part of the private believers. This process was a novelty for the sixth century. But a real cult around an apse mosaic was never instituted, even though the altar for the celebration of the Mass was installed in the apse. The early Christian period had no interest in representing the sacrifice of the Mass in an apse mosaic. Official ecclesiastical prayers were not addressed to divin Shipping may be from our Sydney, NSW warehouse or from our UK or US warehouse, depending on stock availability.
Editore: Zurich, Belser Verlag, 1987, 1987
Da: BOOKSELLER - ERIK TONEN BOOKS, Antwerpen, Belgio
Membro dell'associazione: ILAB
EUR 25,00
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Aggiungi al carrelloGebunden, Leinen mit Schutzumschlag, 210 x 285mm., 312S., 110 Abbildungen. Wissenschaftlicher Erganzungsband zur Faksimile-Ausgabe des Codex Benedictus, Vat. lat. 1202. Guter Zustand. 1700 g.
Editore: Propyläen Verlag, Frankfurt am Main Berlin Wien, 1985
Da: INFINIBU KG, Neuss, Germania
EUR 18,96
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Aggiungi al carrelloHardcover. Condizione: Sehr gut. Eine umfassende Darstellung der Kunst und Architektur der Spätantike und des frühen Christentums in Europa. Zustand: Einband mit geringfügigen Gebrauchsspuren, insgesamt SEHR GUTER Zustand! Stichworte: Genres: Kunstgeschichte, Christliche Kunst, Archäologie; Schlagworte: Spätantike, Christentum, Kunstgeschichte, Archäologie, Europa, Byzanz, Römisches Reich, Antike, Propyläen, Beat Brenk. 123 Seiten Deutsch 1383g.
Hardcover. Condizione: new. Hardcover. English summary: This book on the Sicilian Norman mosaics has an unusual inception story. The ideas expressed in it were generated not primarily through library readings but rather through the direct observation of the mosaics themselves from the scaffolds in the Cappella Palatina and the Martorana in Palermo and the Cefalu Cathedral, as well as those in churches in the Greek East (Daphni, Nea Moni on Chios, St. Michael in Kiev, etc.). The aim, indeed, was to analyse all the mosaics from the greatest possible proximity. At the same time, digital photography, which has developed rapidly in the last twenty years, has been a crucial auxiliary. Seeing at close range has raised new questions that have placed the mosaic as an artistic technique in a broader context. For the first time, it has been possible to present a chemical analysis of tesserae (by Andreas Kronz ) from the Cappella Palatina. New observations on the artistic design and the craft production process of the mosaics, the organisation of the mosaic workshops and the economic conditions of the mosaic are up for debate. The present study is entirely focused on defining the artistic originality of Norman mosaics in comparison to Byzantine programmes and working methods. The common art-historical practice of seeking "influences and models" has been laid aside. The Martorana, the Cappella Palatina and Cefalu Cathedral are new and unprecedented creations of the Norman court, executed by master builders, sculptors and mosaicists a small proportion of whom were locally sourced, while many others originated from other parts of the Mediterranean region. Greek mosaicists, together with mosaicists probably brought to Sicily from Venice, Rome and elsewhere, formed part of a single workshop that utilized a common approach, common techniques and designs, and was responsible for the decoration of the vast wall surfaces at the three sites, executed between about 1135 and 1143/1148. The three Norman structures, all dating to the reign of Roger II, are virtually awash with mosaics and paintings, a sign of royal rhetoric that should be understood not as a continuation of local traditions but as a form of unsurpassable and unrepeatable conceptual art. King Roger's aim was to surpass all his predecessors with the power of his imperious rhetoric.All three programmes culminate in a powerful presentation of the celestial hierarchy ruled by the Pantocrator and seconded by archangels, prophets, apostles, saints and Church Fathers, and are characterized by a syncretic union of the Eastern and Western churches together with elements from Fatimid culture. Only the royal palace chapel has been additionally furnished with a programme of New and Old Testament scenes to which Herbert Kessler devotes a profound analysis. German description: Dieses Buch hat eine ungewohnliche Entstehungsgeschichte. Die Ideen haben sich nicht in erster Linie durch Lekture in der Bibliothek artikuliert, sondern in direktem Augenkontakt mit den Mosaiken auf den Gerusten der Cappella Palatina und der Martorana in Palermo sowie der Kathedrale von Cefalu, und auf den Gerusten in Kirchen im griechischen Osten (Daphni, Nea Moni auf Chios, St. Michael in Kiev) Mein Ziel war es in der Tat, alle Mosaiken aus grosst moglicher Nahe zu analysieren. Gleichzeitig war die digitale Fotografie, die sich in den letzten zwanzig Jahren rasant entwickelt hat, von entscheidender Bedeutung. Das Sehen aus der Nahe hat neue Fragen aufgeworfen, die das Mosaik als kunstlerische Technik in einen breiteren Kontext gestellt haben. Erstmals kann eine chemische Analyse einiger Tesserae aus der Cappella Palatina vorgelegt werden, die Andreas Kronz verdankt wird. Neue Beobachtungen uber das kunstlerische Design und den handwerklichen Herstellungsprozess der Mosaiken, uber die Organisation der Mosaikwerkstatten und uber die wirtschaf Shipping may be from multiple locations in the US or from the UK, depending on stock availability.
EUR 113,30
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Aggiungi al carrelloBuch. Condizione: Neu. The Mosaics of Roger II in Sicily | Visualizing Sacred Authority | Beat Brenk | Buch | Englisch | Reichert | EAN 9783752000191 | Verantwortliche Person für die EU: Heil, Margaret, Margaret Heil, Reichert, Anne-Frank-Str. 11, 63762 Großostheim, margret-heil[at]gmx[dot]de | Anbieter: preigu.