Zodiaque : making medieval modern, 1951-2001
著者
書誌事項
Zodiaque : making medieval modern, 1951-2001
Pennsylvania State University Press, c2015
- : cloth
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注記
Includes bibliographical references (p. [182]-190) and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
Begun in 1951 by monks at the abbey of La Pierre-qui-Vire in Burgundy, the Zodiaque publications consisted of a triennial journal and multiple series of books, including the most famous: La Nuit des temps. The editors' goal was to renew sacred art for twentieth-century viewers by making connections between the direct, "primitive" character of pre-Gothic religious art and an emerging modernist aesthetic. Focusing almost exclusively on Romanesque architecture and sculptural decoration, Zodiaque revived the style's richness and variety, bringing to light monuments lost to popular currency and visually shaping their reception with a new eye to graphic forms. What captured the public imagination and brought the Zodiaque books to international attention was their primary feature: striking black-and-white photogravures. These powerful images went beyond documentary photography to become collectible graphic prints, shaping the plastic form seen by the camera into a fresh two-dimensional artwork. In Zodiaque, Janet Marquardt explores the motivations, philosophies, and workshop practices of Editions Zodiaque and how they affected the scholarly discourse on medieval art and architecture.
目次
Contents
Foreword by Christian Sapin
Acknowledgments
A Note on the Text and Sources
Introduction
1 The Setting
2 The Project
3 The Texts
4 The Photographs
5 The Impact
Appendix
Notes
Selected Bibliography
Photographic Credits
Index
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