Imprinting the Divine

Byzantine and Russian Icons from the Menil Collection

By: Annemarie Weyl Carr

Code: LIARCA0239066

50.00
WITH FREE SHIPPING
45.00 € *
IF YOU PICK UP IN STORE
Discounted price if you collect the product in our shops in Milan and Cambiago:
* Optional choice in the cart
Add to cart
SAFE PAYMENTS
pagamenti sicuri
Request information
Book a date
Imprinting the Divine

Byzantine and Russian Icons from the Menil Collection

By:

Code: LIARCA0239066

50.00
WITH FREE SHIPPING
45.00 € *
IF YOU PICK UP IN STORE
Discounted price if you collect the product in our shops in Milan and Cambiago:
* Optional choice in the cart
Add to cart
SAFE PAYMENTS
pagamenti sicuri
Request information
Book a date

Imprinting the Divine - Byzantine and Russian Icons from the Menil Collection

Features

Byzantine and Russian Icons from the Menil Collection

Author: 

Publisher:  Yale University Press

Place of printing:  New Haven - London

Year of publication: 

The Menil's collection of Byzantine and related icons is widely regarded as one of the most important in the United States. Comprising more than sixty works, many acquired by Dominique de Menil in 1985 from the noted British collector Eric Bradley, the group spans twelve hundred years, from the sixth to the eighteenth centuries, and encompasses a number of distinct cultures, including Greek, Balkan, and Russian. In this volume, the first publication to survey this diverse collection, leading scholars explore the history and meaning of these remarkable works, and their continuing power to surprise and impress.

Orthodox Christianity developed in the Near East during the Byzantine Empire, in time yielding eleven autocephalous communions of which the Greek, Russian, Romanian, Serbian, and Bulgarian Orthodox churches are the largest today. Each maintained the tradition of icon painting rooted in Byzantium but inflected it in distinctive ways. Transcending time and place through a delicate balance of tradition and innovation, these images of saintly or divine figures were designed to imprint their holy subjects on the human mind. Though largely dismissed as backward by Renaissance and Enlightenment Europeans, icons captured the imagination of early modernist painters, and contemporary audiences appreciate them as aesthetic objects.

Distributed for The Menil Collection


Exhibition Schedule:

The Menil Collection
(10/21/11-03/04/12)

Product Condition:
Example in good condition. Dust jacket with traces of dust, light scratches, minimal abrasions and minimal signs of wear on the edges and corners. Slight yellowing at the edges of the pages. Text in English. English text. Book in good condition.

ISBN Code:  030016968X

EAN:  9780300169683

Pages:  168

Format:  Hardback with dust jacket

Dimensions (cm):
Height:  28
Width:  2

Description

Text in English. English text. Contributions by Annemarie Wayl Carr, Bertrand Davezac, Clare Elliott. The Menil Collection. October 21, 2011- March 18, 2012. Numerous color illustrations nt and ft

Product availability

Immediate availability
Ready for delivery within 2 working days from ordering the product.

Alternative proposals
It could also interest you