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The 17th century saw the introduction of different types of internal plasterwork. Stucco marble was an artificial marble made using gypsum (sometimes with lime), pigments, water and glue. Stucco lustro was another a form of imitation marble (sometimes called stucco lucido) where a thin layer of lime or gypsum plaster was applied over a scored ...
Museums established in the 15th century (1 P) Pages in category "Buildings and structures completed in the 15th century" The following 64 pages are in this category, out of 64 total.
Religious images and playing cards are documented as being produced on paper, probably printed, by a German in Bologna in 1395. [2] However, the most impressive printed European images to survive from before 1400 are printed on cloth, for use as hangings on walls or furniture, including altars and lecterns. Some were used as a pattern to ...
Buildings and structures completed in the 15th century (20 C, 64 P) D. 15th-century documents (4 C, 10 P) 15th-century drawings (2 C, 4 P) H. Works by Robert Henryson ...
15th century: alterations in 18th century: ↑: Casa Borioli [210] 15th century: no photo in WM Commons ↓: Castelnuovo Scrivia: Castello Podestarile [211] ↑: Chivasso: Santa Maria Assunta 1415–1429: outside Gothic inside Baroque: ↓: Cuneo: St-Francis Church & compound 15th century: predecessors since 13th century, nowadays municipal ...
The invention of a comprehensive mathematically based system of linear perspective is a defining achievement of the early-15th-century Italian Renaissance in Florence, but Gothic painting had already made great progress in the naturalistic depiction of distance and volume, though it did not usually regard them as essential features of a work if ...
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The 15th-century Nailloux Altarpiece in south-western France is an example of a five-panel set that remains in situ. Many statues were smaller than this, but there are a number of larger ones. An example of a much larger statue, three feet high and free-standing but flat-backed, is Our Lady of Westminster , now in London but found by the art ...