In this interdisciplinary study, Henry Maguire examines the impact of several literary genres and rhetorical techniques on the visual arts of Byzantium. In ...
Continue Reading →The progressive movements from the turn of the nineteenth century to the dawn of World War I largely preconditioned the modern avant-gardes that ...
Continue Reading →When we look at the view while out walking, or when protestors against wind farms criticise them for damaging the ‘landscape’, or when ...
Continue Reading →Unprecedented in its in-depth coverage, and with over 500 illustrations, photographs, and architectural drawings the multi-volume Companion to the History of Architecture offers ...
Continue Reading →First published in 1966, and since translated into 16 languages, this remarkable book has become an essential document of architectural literature. A “gentle ...
Continue Reading →The paragone―the notion of competition and rivalry among the arts―has been a topic of debate for centuries. It erupted with great force in ...
Continue Reading →This book seeks to broaden the comprehension of the student of Italian Renaissance painting by concentrating not on the works of art themselves, ...
Continue Reading →‘Building in Words’ deals with the process of construction in Roman imperial literature from Vergil to the second century AD. The first part ...
Continue Reading →Erwin Panofksy was one of the great scholars of the twentieth century. Panofsky modestly described his second annual Wimmer Lecture at Saint Vincent ...
Continue Reading →In 1956 art historian Panofsky gave four incisive lectures at the Institute of Fine Arts at New York University which were subsequently published ...
Continue Reading →