The formative years of Bohemian painting under Charles IV – from 1346 King of the Romans and from 1355 Holy Roman Emperor – are still plagued with uncertainties. Little survives (much was destroyed as a result of Hussite iconoclasm), and dating is a matter of guesswork. Both French and Italian – as well as Austrian and German – sources for the highly original style that evolved over the course of the 1340s and 1350s are the object of considerable debate. In 2019 a previously unknown work, small in scale though of exquisite quality, appeared on the art market in France and was purchased by the Metropolitan Museum of Art. The present article examines the architectural setting for the figures of the Virgin and Child, remarking on its predominantly Giottesque character.
Index
Francesco Aceto
Between Giotto and Simone Martini. A rare painted portal with 'Stories of the Passion' in Naples cathedral and its topographical and liturgical context
read abstract » pp. 13-22
read abstract » pp. 13-22
Victor M. Schmidt
A proposal for Ambrogio Lorenzetti's panel paintings from the church of San Procolo in Florence
read abstract » pp. 23-30
read abstract » pp. 23-30
Keith Christiansen
The architecture in a Bohemian panel of the Metropolitan Museum of Art
read abstract » pp. 31-35
read abstract » pp. 31-35
Gabriele Fattorini
On the 'Annunciation' of the Kaiser-Friedrich-Museum by Jacopo della Quercia
read abstract » pp. 36-46
read abstract » pp. 36-46
Francesco Caglioti
Desiderio da Settignano the portraitist: “una testa del Chardinale di Portoghallo”, or the 'Saint Lawrence' in the Old Sacristy of San Lorenzo in Florence
read abstract » pp. 47-59
read abstract » pp. 47-59
Alessandro Angelini
Francesco di Giorgio in Urbino and the iconography of the 'Flagellation'
read abstract » pp. 60-68
read abstract » pp. 60-68
Gianluca Amato
Benedetto da Maiano: two proposals for the catalogue of terracottas
read abstract » pp. 69-77
read abstract » pp. 69-77
Antonio Mazzotta
Evidence pointing to the identity of the 'Master of the Sforza Altarpiece'
read abstract » pp. 78-85
read abstract » pp. 78-85
Roberto Bartalini
Raphael and Sodoma in the Stanza della Segnatura. New findings
read abstract » pp. 86-95
read abstract » pp. 86-95
Rosanna De Gennaro
About the little-known opisthographic marble altarpiece of the abbey of Montevergine
read abstract » pp. 122-131
read abstract » pp. 122-131
Elisabetta Cioni
Notes on the 17th-century reliquary of the right arm of Saint John the Baptist of Siena cathedral
read abstract » pp. 132-142
read abstract » pp. 132-142
Gennaro Toscano
The popularity of Dante in France in the early 19th century. Aubin-Louis Millin and ms. XIII.C.4 of the Biblioteca Nazionale in Naples
read abstract » pp. 148-159
read abstract » pp. 148-159
Laura Cavazzini
Alceo Dossena and the forgery of Gothic sculpture between Lombardy and Tuscany
read abstract » pp. 168-176
read abstract » pp. 168-176
Luca Quattrocchi
Italian art for National Socialism. Antonio Maraini and the Ausstellung Italienischer Kunst von 1800 bis zur Gegenwart exhibition in Berlin in 1937
read abstract » pp. 177-186
read abstract » pp. 177-186
Marco M. Mascolo
Wilhelm R. Valentiner, Renaissance sculpture and the problems of connoisseurship
read abstract » pp. 187-194
read abstract » pp. 187-194