Robert Campin - Nwa agbọghọ na-amaghị nwoke na nwa na Apse - ọmarịcha nka

39,99 €

Ụtụ gụnyere. Mbupu gbakọrọ na ndenye ọpụpụ.

Nkọwa zuru oke site na weebụsaịtị The Metropolitan Museum of Art (© - nke Ụlọ ihe ngosi nka nke Obodo ukwu - www.metmuseum.org)

Next to Jan van Eyck, Robert Campin was one of the founders of early Netherlandish painting whose celebrated Merode Triptych is displayed at the Cloisters. Based on a lost original of about 1420, this picture is among the earliest of over sixty variants that attest to the burgeoning cult of the Virgin during the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries in the Burgundian Netherlands. While the motif of the suckling Child lying in his mother’s arms derives from the Byzantine icon type known as the galaktotrophousa, the music-making angels refer to liturgical celebration, evoking the numerous contemporary hymns which praised the Virgin.

Nkọwa ahaziri nke mpempe nka

Aha nka: "Virgin and Child in an Apse"
Nhazi: sere
Ihe osise izizi: mmanụ na kwaaji, na-ebufe site na osisi
Nha izizi: 17 3/4 x 13 1/2 na (45,1 x 34,3 cm)
Ụlọ ihe ngosi nka: Museumlọ ihe ngosi nka nke Obodo
Ebe ebe ngosi nka: New York City, New York, Njikota Obodo Amerika
Ibe weebụ: www.metmuseum.org
Ụdị nka nka: ngalaba ọha
Site n'aka: Ụlọ ihe ngosi nka nke Metropolitan, New York, Rogers Fund, 1905
Ebe kredit nke ọrụ nka: Rogers Fund, 1905

Ozi omenka

Aha onye nka: Robert Campin
Aha nka ndị ọzọ: Robert Campin, Campin, Campin Robert, Master of Mérode
okike nke onye nka: nwoke
Nationality: Dutch
Ọrụ: onye na-ese ihe, onye na-ese ihe
Obodo onye nka: mba netherland
Ụdị nka: Northern Renaissance
Afọ ọnwụ: 69 afọ
Afọ ọmụmụ: 1375
Nwụrụ n'afọ: 1444
Nwụrụ na (ebe): Tournai, Province de Hainaut, Wallonia, Belgium

Ngwaahịa a

Nkewa edemede: ezi nka mmeputakwa
Usoro mmeghari: dijitalụ mmeputakwa
Usoro nhazi: Mbipụta UV ozugbo (mbipụta dijitalụ)
Nlụpụta: arụpụtara na Germany
Ụdị ngwaahịa: a na-achọ
Ihe eji eme atụmatụ: ihe ndozi ụlọ, nka mgbidi
Nhazi nka nka: nhazi ihe osise
Oke akụkụ: 3: 4
Mmetụta nke akụkụ akụkụ: ogologo bụ 25% mkpụmkpụ karịa obosara
Nhọrọ dị: akwụkwọ mmado (akwụkwọ kwaaji), mbipụta ọla (aluminium dibond), mbipụta iko acrylic (nke nwere ezigbo mkpuchi iko), mbipụta akwụkwọ.
Mbipụta kanvas (akwa akwa n'elu etiti ihe ndọtị) ụdị nha dị iche iche: 30x40cm - 12x16"
Mbipụta iko acrylic (nwere ezigbo mkpuchi iko) nhọrọ nha: 30x40cm - 12x16"
Mbipụta akwụkwọ mmado (akwụkwọ kwaaji): 30x40cm - 12x16"
Nha ebipụta aluminium dibond: 30x40cm - 12x16"
Igwe onyonyo: adịghị

Họrọ ụdị ngwaahịa ngwaahịa

Maka mbipụta nka ọ bụla dị mma anyị na-enye nha na ihe dị iche iche. Ị nwere ike ịhọrọ n'ime nhọrọ nhazi ngwaahịa ndị a:

  • Akwụkwọ mmado na ihe kwaaji: A poster print is a printed canvas with a slightly roughened structure on the surface. It is appropriate for framing the fine art print with the help of a custom-made frame. Please note, that depending on the size of the canvas poster print we add a white margin between 2-6cm around the work of art, which facilitates the framing with your custom frame.
  • Mbipụta nke aluminom: These are metal prints on aluminium dibond with an outstanding depth. The Direct Print on Aluminum Dibond is your excellent start to reproductions on aluminum. The white & bright components of the artwork shimmer with a silky gloss but without glare.
  • Mbipụta iko acrylic (nke nwere ezigbo mkpuchi iko): A glossy acrylic glass print, which is often described as a an art print on plexiglass, will convert the original into wonderful wall decoration. The work of art is made thanks to state-of-the-art UV printing technology. Our acrylic glass protects your chosen art print against sunlight and heat for between 40-60 years.
  • Mbipụta kanvas: The UV printed canvas material applied on a wood frame. How do I hang a canvas print on my wall? The great advantage of canvas prints is that they are relatively low in weight. This means, it is easy to hang your Canvas print without the support of any wall-mounts. Because of thata canvas print is suited for all kinds of walls.

Details

Ihe osise a nwere aha Virgin and Child in an Apse mere site na n'ebe ugwu renaissance artist Robert Campin. Ụdị nke nka nwere nha: 17 3/4 x 13 1/2 na (45,1 x 34,3 cm) and was painted on the medium oil on canvas, transferred from wood. Today, the artwork belongs to the Ụlọ ihe ngosi nka nke Metropolitan nchịkọta nka dijitalụ. Site n'ikike nke: Ụlọ ihe ngosi nka nke Metropolitan, New York, Rogers Fund, 1905 (ikike ngalaba ọha). Besides, the work of art has the creditline: Rogers Fund, 1905. Besides this, the alignment of the digital reproduction is Eserese ya na oke akụkụ nke 3: 4, nke pụtara na ogologo bụ 25% mkpụmkpụ karịa obosara. The painter, draftsman Robert Campin was an artist from the Netherlands, whose style can primarily be assigned to Northern Renaissance. The Northern Renaissance painter was born in 1375 ma nwụọ na afọ nke 69 na 1444.

Disclaimer: We try all that we can in order to depict the art products as precisely as possible and to display them visually in our shop. Nonetheless, the tone of the print products and the imprint may diverge slightly from the presentation on your screen. Depending on the screen settings and the condition of the surface, colors might not be printed as realistically as the digital version. In view of the fact that all our are printed and processed by hand, there might as well be slight variations in the exact position and the size of the motif.

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