Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Pastoral Cross, Opera della Duomo, Siena, Italy

View through Harvard Museums
This drawing is made on half of a sheet of paper folded vertically. On the other half of the sheet is drawn 1919.349. A series of horizontal lines has been drawn over the image.
Department of Drawings Denman W. Ross Cambridge MA; his gift to the Fogg Art Museum 1919. Harvard Art Museums/Fogg Museum Gift of Denman W. Ross
Title: Pastoral Cross, Opera della Duomo, Siena, Italy
Description:
This drawing is made on half of a sheet of paper folded vertically.
On the other half of the sheet is drawn 1919.
349.
A series of horizontal lines has been drawn over the image.

Related Results

Cross in the Wilderness
Cross in the Wilderness
In the United States the dissemination of the writings of the German naturalist Alexander von Humboldt in the mid-nineteenth century aroused a growing interest in South America, to...
X-radiograph(s) of "Study for Head of St. Hilary (after a detail of fresco in the Duomo Parma)"
X-radiograph(s) of "Study for Head of St. Hilary (after a detail of fresco in the Duomo Parma)"
X-Radiograph Description: Overall X-Radiograph Settings: 20 kv, 2 ma, 5 sec Burroughs Number: 445 X-Radiograph(s) of: Artist: Correggio, Italian, ca. 1489-1534 Title: S...
Solidus of Michael III, Constantinople
Solidus of Michael III, Constantinople
Obv.: Bust facing, wearing loros and crown with pendilia and three pinnacles with central cross. In r. hand, globus surmounted by patriarchal cross; in l., cross scepter. Trace of ...
Follis of Constantine VI and Irene, Constantinople
Follis of Constantine VI and Irene, Constantinople
Obv.: Bust of Irene facing, wearing loros and crown with cross, pinnacles, and pendilia. In r. hand, gl. cr.; in l., cross scepter. Rev.: Above horizontal line, bust of Constant...
Cassone
Cassone
Walnut partially carved traces of gilding and polychrome; iron hardware., Italian (Siena or Rome?)...

Back to Top