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

Man and the Renaissance

View through Open Library
Andrew Martindale, Renaissance Art, 1966-01-01, McGraw Hill
Title: Man and the Renaissance
Description:
Andrew Martindale, Renaissance Art, 1966-01-01, McGraw Hill.

Related Results

The Renaissance city
The Renaissance city
Giulio Carlo Argan, Architecture, Renaissance, 1969, Studio Vista...
Renaissance
Renaissance
Manfred Wundram, European Art, 1972, Weidenfeld and Nicolson...
Tudor Renaissance
Tudor Renaissance
James Lees-Milne, Art, 1951, B.T. Batsford...
Viewing Renaissance art
Viewing Renaissance art
Kim Woods, Art and society, July 10, 2007, In association with The Open University...
Renaissance quarterly
Renaissance quarterly
Renaissance Society of America, Renaissance, 1967, Renaissance Society of America....
The Renaissance
The Renaissance
Walter Pater, Renaissance Arts, July 31, 1998, BiblioBazaar...
The High Renaissance
The High Renaissance
Murray, Linda., Renaissance Art, 1967-01-01, Frederick A. Phaeger...
Renaissance
Renaissance
Tracy Elizabeth Cooper, Art, Italian, 1995, Booth-Clibborn...

Recent Results

US 2020 census will affect post-2020 voting dynamics
US 2020 census will affect post-2020 voting dynamics
Subject The US 2020 census. Significance The United States will hold its ten-yearly census in 2020, with cens...
Domains of Polarity Items
Domains of Polarity Items
Abstract This article offers a unified theory of the licensing of Negative and Positive Polarity Items (PIs), focusing on the acceptability conditions of PPIs of the...
British Excavations at Constantinople
British Excavations at Constantinople
The study of the archaeology of eastern Christendom is as yet still in its infancy and the students of east Christian and Byzantine art have been few and far between in England. Bu...
Les intellectuelles et l’amour: Marie de Gournay et Marguerite de Valois
Les intellectuelles et l’amour: Marie de Gournay et Marguerite de Valois
When a woman defined herself as an intellectual in the Renaissance, she could not, even if she wished, detach that role from the cultural expectations conventionally attached to he...

Back to Top