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A catalogue raisonné is normally produced by the artist or by a committee of family members, experts or academics, collectively known as "producers". The catalogue ordinarily contains a list of characteristics of an artwork such as the title, year of production, dimensions, medium and a description of the work, alongside an image of the work.
The following is a list of paintings by Rembrandt in order of appearance (frontispiece and catalogue pages 3–511), that were attributed as autograph by Adolf Rosenberg and Wilhelm Reinhold Valentiner in 1908.
Rembrandt catalogue raisonné may refer to the following lists of paintings: Rembrandt catalogue raisonné, 1908 , by Adolf Rosenberg and Wilhelm Reinhold Valentiner Rembrandt catalogue raisonné, 1935 , by Abraham Bredius
The following is the list of 145 paintings indexed as autograph by Frans Hals, written by the art historian and Hals specialist Claus Grimm in 1989. The list is by catalogue number and is more or less in order of creation, starting from around 1610 when Hals began painting on his own.
The following is a list of paintings by Rembrandt in order of appearance (catalogue numbers 1–420), that were attributed as autograph by Horst Gerson in 1968.
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John Smith (1781–1855) was a 19th-century British art dealer who developed the concept of the catalogue raisonné.. Smith was born in London.He began dealing in art as a framemaker, specializing in wood-carving and gilding. [1]
An example is the Monet: Catalogue Raisonné (ISBN 978-3-8228-8559-8), which is a four volume set published in 1996 with 2,580 illustrations in 1,540 pages. In this set, volume I is a biography and volumes II-IV contain a chronological listing of Monet's work; that is to say, volume II contains Wildenstein Index No. 1 produced in 1858 through ...