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The glory of Byzantium: art and culture of the Middle Byzantine era, A.D. 843-1261, no. 80, 1997, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, ISBN 9780810965072; full text available online from The Metropolitan Museum of Art Libraries; Le Triptyque Byzantin de la Collection Harbaville, on Academia (in french)
Harbaville Triptych: close-up on the top panel of the right leaf. Ivory with traces of polychromy, middle of the 10th century. |Former collections Beugny de Pommeras Harbaville; purchase, 1891 |H. 24.2 cm
Although monumental sculpture is extremely rare in Byzantine art, the Macedonian period saw the unprecedented flourishing of the art of ivory sculpture. Many ornate ivory triptychs and diptychs survive, with the central panel often representing either deesis (as in the Harbaville Triptych ) or the Theotokos (as in a triptych at Luton Hoo ...
Harbaville Triptych: Triptych in ivory (Byzantine) Borghese Vase: Krater Daniel Pincot: Investiture of Zimrilim: Fresco (Mari, Syria) See also.
Harbaville Triptych, 28 x 24 cm. The Romanos Ivory is a carved ivory relief panel from the Byzantine empire measuring 24.6 cm (at the highest) by 15.5 cm and 1.2 cm thick. [1] The panel is currently in the Cabinet des Médailles of Paris. Inscriptions name the figures of the emperor Romanos and his wife Eudokia, who are being blessed by Christ ...
The triptych format has been used in non-Christian faiths, including, Judaism, Islam, and Buddhism. For example: the triptych Hilje-j-Sherif displayed at the National Museum of Oriental Art, Rome, Italy, and a page of the Qur'an at the Museum of Turkish and Islamic Arts in Istanbul, Turkey, exemplify Ottoman religious art adapting the motif. [7]
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