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

Between Venice and the Balkans. Lovro Dobričević’s Polyptych for the Dubrovnik Franciscans

View through CrossRef
Abstract Our understanding of painting in Renaissance Dubrovnik (Ragusa) depends on a handful of surviving works. Arguably the most sophisticated is the Franciscan polyptych now divided between the Wernher Collection in London and the National Gallery in Prague, which has been attributed to the Kotor-born and Venice-trained artist, Lovro Dobričević. This article challenges existing proposals that associate the Wernher-Prague altarpiece with a commission of ca 1469 for the Franciscan church at Rožat near Dubrovnik, suggesting instead a provenance from the Order’s church at Slano (some 20 miles to the north) and a date ca 1461. The new context and date for the altarpiece situate the work in a brief historical window when the Bosnian province (or “Vicariate”) of the Franciscan Order was actively commissioning altarpieces from Dobričević for their churches around Dubrovnik and in Bosnia proper. The Wernher-Prague polyptych reveals the enduring prestige of late-Gothic Venetian painting in Dubrovnik and also the city’s role in exporting art into its Balkan hinterland.
Brepols Publishers NV
Title: Between Venice and the Balkans. Lovro Dobričević’s Polyptych for the Dubrovnik Franciscans
Description:
Abstract Our understanding of painting in Renaissance Dubrovnik (Ragusa) depends on a handful of surviving works.
Arguably the most sophisticated is the Franciscan polyptych now divided between the Wernher Collection in London and the National Gallery in Prague, which has been attributed to the Kotor-born and Venice-trained artist, Lovro Dobričević.
This article challenges existing proposals that associate the Wernher-Prague altarpiece with a commission of ca 1469 for the Franciscan church at Rožat near Dubrovnik, suggesting instead a provenance from the Order’s church at Slano (some 20 miles to the north) and a date ca 1461.
The new context and date for the altarpiece situate the work in a brief historical window when the Bosnian province (or “Vicariate”) of the Franciscan Order was actively commissioning altarpieces from Dobričević for their churches around Dubrovnik and in Bosnia proper.
The Wernher-Prague polyptych reveals the enduring prestige of late-Gothic Venetian painting in Dubrovnik and also the city’s role in exporting art into its Balkan hinterland.

Related Results

The Turkish Language in the Poetry Collection Compiled by Miho Martelini from Dubrovnik
The Turkish Language in the Poetry Collection Compiled by Miho Martelini from Dubrovnik
In the library of the National Museum of Bosnia and Herzegovina in Sarajevo there is a manuscript poetry collection compiled by Miho Martelini from Dubrovnik. The collection was co...
TIHOMIR ĐORĐEVIĆ I DUBROVNIK
TIHOMIR ĐORĐEVIĆ I DUBROVNIK
In the preserved correspondence of Tihomir Djordjevic, a prominent Serbian ethnologist and a professor of the University of Belgrade, alongisde with his membership in the Serbian R...
Ekonomika bosanskih velikaša u 14. i 15. stoljeću
Ekonomika bosanskih velikaša u 14. i 15. stoljeću
The role and significance of the Bosnian nobility in the historical currents of medieval Bosnia can be reliably traced in the 14th and 15th centuries when various socio-political f...
Two early cinquecento Renaissance polyptychs by Antonio de Saliba on Sicily and Malta: an art-historical and scientific investigationtion
Two early cinquecento Renaissance polyptychs by Antonio de Saliba on Sicily and Malta: an art-historical and scientific investigationtion
This study focuses on two Renaissance polyptychs that were produced by Antonio (1466/7–c. 1535) and Giovanni de Saliba (doc. 1461–1517?), referred to in this study as the Taormina ...
Vessels from Late Medieval cemeteries in the Central Balkans
Vessels from Late Medieval cemeteries in the Central Balkans
Although a rare occurrence in late medieval cemeteries, vessels have been found on almost all major sites of the period, such as Novo Brdo, Trgoviste, Reljina Gradina and the...
Balkans (and Western Balkans) as negative political terms
Balkans (and Western Balkans) as negative political terms
The paper analyzes the negative perception of the Balkans, with special reference to the Western Balkans, as a newly introduced political concept. The author explains the historica...
TÜRKİYE AND THE BALKANS IN THE LAST CENTURY
TÜRKİYE AND THE BALKANS IN THE LAST CENTURY
This study, prepared on the occasion of the 100th anniversary of the Republic of Türkiye, aims to collectively show the developments in Türkiye and the Balkans in the last century ...
Daniele Clario dubrovačkom nadbiskupu o Epidauru, 1505.
Daniele Clario dubrovačkom nadbiskupu o Epidauru, 1505.
In Vatican MS Ott. lat. 707 on ff. 234–239 (constituting a separate quire) there is a letter, most probably autograph, from the humanist of Parma Daniele Clario sent from Dubrovnik...

Back to Top