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  2. Faux painting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Faux_painting

    Faux finishing has been used for millennia, from cave painting to the tombs of ancient Egypt, but what we generally think of as faux finishing in the decorative arts began with plaster and stucco finishes in Mesopotamia over 5,000 years ago. Faux painting became popular in classical times in the forms of faux marble, faux wood, and trompe-l ...

  3. Painted ceiling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Painted_ceiling

    A painted ceiling is a ceiling covered with an artistic mural or painting. They are usually decorated with fresco painting, mosaic tiles and other surface treatments. While hard to execute (at least in situ) a decorated ceiling has the advantage that it is largely protected from damage by fingers and dust.

  4. Mosaic ceiling of the Florence Baptistery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mosaic_ceiling_of_the...

    Overview. The Mosaic ceiling of the Florence Baptistery is a set of mosaics covering the internal dome and apses of the Baptistery of Florence.It is one of the most important cycles of medieval Italian mosaics, created between 1225 and around 1330 using designs by major Florentine painters such as Cimabue, Coppo di Marcovaldo, Meliore and the Master of the Magdalen, probably by mosaicists from ...

  5. Lucchese school - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lucchese_School

    'Madonna and Child', tempera and gold on wood panel by an anonymous painter of the Lucchese school, ca. 1200, El Paso Museum of Art The Lucchese school, also known as the school of Lucca and as the Pisan-Lucchese school, was a school of painting and sculpture that flourished in the 11th and 12th centuries in Pisa and Lucca in Tuscany with affinities to painters in Volterra.

  6. Italianate architecture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Italianate_architecture

    The Italian, specifically Tuscan, influence on architecture in Lebanon dates back to the Renaissance when Fakhreddine, the first Lebanese ruler who truly unified Mount Lebanon with its Mediterranean coast, executed an ambitious plan to develop his country. When the Ottomans exiled Fakhreddine to Tuscany in 1613, he entered an alliance with the ...

  7. Artex - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artex

    Artex differs from plaster in that it was marketed as a material intended to receive a textured finish, thus enabling a ceiling to be finished without plastering skills. It was widely used in Britain in the 1970s, mainly with the familiar stippled and swirled patterns. Artex was also occasionally used on walls. [2]

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