Number of the records: 1  

Art in the Czech Lands 800-2000

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    0492383 - ÚDU 2018 RIV CZ eng B - Monography
    Petrasová, Taťána (ed.) - Švácha, Rostislav (ed.) - Benešovská, Klára - Bregantová, Polana - Bukovinská, Beket - Bydžovská, Lenka - Chlíbec, Jan - Dobalová, Sylva - Hlaváčková, Hana - Hlobil, Ivo - Hnídková, Vendula - Konečný, Lubomír - Kratochvíl, Petr - Krummholz, Martin - Kubínová, Kateřina - Lahoda, Vojtěch - Lencová, Jaroslava - Machalíková, Pavla - Mádl, Martin - Merhautová, A. - Muchka, Ivan - Nešlehová, Mahulena - Panochová, Ivana - Panušková, Lenka - Prix, Dalibor - Purš, Ivo - Šroněk, Michal - Studničková, Milada - Trnková, Petra - Vácha, Štěpán - Valeš, Tomáš - Všetečková, Zuzana - Winter, Tomáš
    Art in the Czech Lands 800-2000.
    Řevnice: Arbor vitae societas: Prague: Artefactum, 2017. 991 s. ISBN 978-80-904534-9-4; ISBN 978-80-88283-01-0
    Institutional support: RVO:68378033
    Keywords : Czech Lands * medieval art * early modern art * modern art * performance art * new media art * architecture * painting * sculpture * design * manuscript illumination * photography
    OECD category: Arts, Art history

    The publication Art in the Czech Lands 800-2000, edited by Taťána Petrasová and Rostislav Švácha from the Institute of Art History at the Czech Academy of Sciences, provides readers to become better acquainted with the entire range of the art of this part of Europe in a single comprehensive volume. On the basis of around eight hundred examples, a team of leading experts demonstrates the changes that have taken place in various different forms of art from the early Middle Ages down to the present day. In the book, readers will find examples from the fields of painting, sculpture, architecture and ornamental gardening, manuscript illumination and printmaking, art handicraft and design, photography, performance art, and other forms of new media art. The authors decided to take a different approach from traditional art history surveys, and to present the changes that have taken place in artistic production in the Czech lands in the form of groups of two, three, or four works of art which together form a context and explain each other.
    Permanent Link: http://hdl.handle.net/11104/0285940

     
     
Number of the records: 1  

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