Literatura académica sobre el tema "Immagine sacra"
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Artículos de revistas sobre el tema "Immagine sacra"
Riklius, Tomas. "Classical texts in the art treatises of early Modern Period". Literatūra 61, n.º 3 (20 de diciembre de 2019): 98–108. http://dx.doi.org/10.15388/litera.2019.3.8.
Texto completoLoyen, Ulrich van. "Fabietti, Ugo E. M.: Materia sacra. Corpi, oggetti, immagini, feticci nella pratica religiosa". Anthropos 111, n.º 1 (2016): 251–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.5771/0257-9774-2016-1-251.
Texto completoRuggiero, Giuseppe. "Un oceano di silenzio. Omaggio a Franco Battiato". PSICOBIETTIVO, n.º 1 (marzo de 2022): 155–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.3280/psob2022-001012.
Texto completoHabib de Salles Abreu, Clara. "O "Discorso" de Paleotti e o desejo por uma teoria Tridentina da imagem". LaborHistórico 6, n.º 2 (29 de diciembre de 2020): 267–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.24206/lh.v6i2.32589.
Texto completoFrancisca de Souza, Marinete Luzia. "Rapporti tra lettere e pastorali di Giovanni Franzoni e di Pedro Casaldaliga". Texto Poético 18, n.º 36 (29 de mayo de 2022): 95–113. http://dx.doi.org/10.25094/rtp.2022n36a862.
Texto completoŻurek, Antoni. "Wierność tradycji. Jan Paweł II a 1200. rocznica soboru nicejskiego II". Vox Patrum 50 (15 de junio de 2007): 145–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.31743/vp.6679.
Texto completoD'Onofrio, Anna Maria. "Immagini di divinità nel materiale votivo dell'edificio ovale geometrico ateniese e indagine sull'area sacra alle pendici settentrionali dell’Areopago". Mélanges de l’École française de Rome. Antiquité 113, n.º 1 (2001): 257–320. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/mefr.2001.10669.
Texto completoMarella, Giuseppe. "Gerusalemme crociata e le immagini sacre: exempla, notazioni estetiche e accenti devozionali nelle fonti medievali". Crusades 9, n.º 1 (31 de diciembre de 2010): 69–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/28327861.2010.12220245.
Texto completoAprile, I., E. Biasizzo, A. Lavaroni, R. Budai, F. Iaiza, P. P. Janes y G. Fabris. "Valutazione degli aneurismi cerebrali con Angio-RM". Rivista di Neuroradiologia 9, n.º 5 (octubre de 1996): 541–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/197140099600900505.
Texto completoCotroneo, R., M. Dazi, R. Gigli, C. Guidetti, A. Pingi, G. Cantore y F. Chiappetta. "Studio Angio-RM degli aneurismi intracranici embolizzati con GDC". Rivista di Neuroradiologia 10, n.º 2_suppl (octubre de 1997): 142. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/19714009970100s256.
Texto completoTesis sobre el tema "Immagine sacra"
TOLA, FABRIZIO. "Parole e immagini nella ritualità della Settimana Santa in Sardegna. Fonti scritte e sculture lignee nella pratica rituale dell’epoca moderna". Doctoral thesis, Università degli Studi di Cagliari, 2016. http://hdl.handle.net/11584/266742.
Texto completoDe, Marchi Laura <1984>. "Mari dipinti e immagini sacre nella cartografia : per una storia di carte, atlanti e planisferi miniati a Venezia nel XIV e XV secolo". Doctoral thesis, Università Ca' Foscari Venezia, 2017. http://hdl.handle.net/10579/10357.
Texto completoCAVENAGO, MARCO. "ARTE SACRA IN ITALIA: LA SCUOLA BEATO ANGELICO DI MILANO (1921-1950)". Doctoral thesis, Università degli Studi di Milano, 2021. http://hdl.handle.net/2434/829725.
Texto completoIn October 1921, the Beato Angelico Higher School of Christian Art was born in Milan. Responsible for the initiative: Don Giuseppe Polvara, the architect Angelo Banfi, the painter Vanni Rossi, flanked by the sculptor Franco Lombardi, by the priests Adriano and Domenico Bernareggi, by the engineer Giovanni Dedè, by professor Giovanni Mamone and by the lawyer Carlo Antonio Vianello . There were nine pupils in the first school year, two of whom (the architects Don Giacomo Bettoli and Fortunato De Angeli) destined to remain in the School for many years as teachers: this also happened with the painter Ernesto Bergagna, who enrolled the following year. Starting from that event, the Italian context of sacred art was able to count on an element of indisputable novelty, destined within a few years to a rapid, widespread and stubborn affirmation in the Peninsula. The foundation of the Beato Angelico School put a stop to the age-old debate on the general decline of sacred art that had been staged for a long time in Italy as well as in major European countries. The formula conceived by Don Polvara put his personal, artistic and professional experiences into a system with the knowledge of the international context, some exemplary models and the comparison with groups and individual figures (artists, critics, men of the Church) animated by the common desire to contribute to the rebirth of sacred art. One hundred years after its birth - and seventy after the death of its founder - the Beato Angelico School (with the workshops of Architecture, Cesello, Embroidery, Painting and Restoration) still continues in the task of serving the Church through the creation of distinctive sacred furnishings and vestments. from a particular care of the artistic and liturgical aspect, object of repeated attestations of merit and acknowledgments in the ecclesiastical sphere. What is missing from the appeal so far is an organic attempt to reconstruct the historical events that marked the genesis and developments of this singular artistic and religious reality. The purpose of this thesis is therefore the return of a profile as detailed and reasoned as possible of the history of the Beato Angelico School, such as to bring this story back to the center of a historical situation and a complex cultural context, through an original work perspective conducted on thread of clarifications and rediscoveries. Given the "pioneering" nature of this research, the vastness of the materials and sources available and the consequent need to assign a recognizable chronological cut to the work, it was decided to limit the survey to the decades between 1921 and 1950, or between the foundation of Beato Angelico and the death of Giuseppe Polvara. As will be seen, the initial term is in a certain sense anticipated by the need to better outline the background and context from which the School originates (between the end of the 19th and the first decades of the 20th century). The year assumed at the end of the research, on the other hand, seemed an almost obligatory choice, coinciding with the first change in the direction of Beato Angelico as well as the desire to exclude from the discussion what started in the 1950s and 1960s, that is a new and different season in the field of sacred art (destined, among other things, to pass through the junction represented by the Second Vatican Council and by the action of St. Paul VI), which is however much investigated by historical-artistic studies. What made the drafting of this thesis possible is the fact that it relies, in large part, on unpublished archival materials or, at least, never examined before in a structured way. Access to the most historicized archive materials and their consultation (thanks to the availability shown by the direction of the Beato Angelico School) have decisively conditioned the discussion of the topics, the reconstruction of which, in some cases, is supported exclusively by documents found. The birth of the Beato Angelico School was not an isolated event in the panorama of European artistic production of the time nor an episode unrelated to what was being debated in the ecclesiastical world at the same time. The Polvara School was born in an era marked by great ecclesial ferment: think of the Ateliers d'Art Sacré founded by Maurice Denis and George Desvallières in Paris in 1919, only two years before the Milanese School, whose adherents - all lay people - they professed an intense and devoted religiosity. But, above all, the decisive and best known model by Polvara was the Beuron School (Beuroner Kunstschule), born in the homonymous German Benedictine abbey in the last quarter of the nineteenth century by father Desiderius Lenz and on whose example workshops specialized in the production of sacred art (furnishings and vestments for liturgical use) in many Benedictine communities in central Europe. Polvara's affinity with Benedictine spirituality is a key element of the School he founded: in fact, the (analogous) concept of "represented prayer" (orando labora) derived from the rule of the ora et labora. The very organization of the School, set up as in an ideal medieval workshop where teachers, apprentices and pupils collaborate and coexist, takes up the monastic lifestyle of the Benedictine monasteries. Precisely in order to preserve the character of the medieval workshop as much as possible, the number of students admitted to the School was never too high, so as to maintain an adequate and effective numerical ratio between disciples and masters. Again, from Beuron Fra Angelico drew the particular and unmistakable graphic form of the letter "e", recognizable in the numerous and long epigraphs present in many of his works. The last element in common between the Milanese and the German schools - but which can be attributed to the more general fascination for the medieval era - is the unity of purpose that must animate all the workers involved in creating a collective and anonymous work ad maiorem. Dei gloriam, where the contribution of the single author remains deliberately hidden in favor of the name of the School. What still differentiates the School from similar centers of production of sacred art is the fact that it rests its foundations on a religious congregation, the Beato Angelico Family, an idea long cultivated by Polvara and officially approved by the diocesan authority between the thirties and forties. From the common vocation to sacred artistic creation (the artist's "priestly mission") descend the practice of community life, the participation in the sacraments and the various daily moments of prayer by master priests, brothers and sisters artists, apprentices, pupils and pupils . The spiritual direction traced by the founder for his family still acts today as a guarantee of a strenuous fidelity in the continuity of a unique artistic and liturgical project, put into practice by a community of men and women linked together by the canonical vows of poverty, chastity. and obedience but above all from a common and higher intent. Precisely to ensure a prospect of survival and future development of his creature, Polvara always had a clear need to keep the training aspect (and therefore the teaching for students, adolescents and young people) united with that of production (due to the work of collaboration between teachers, apprentices and students). From an operational point of view, the artistic disciplines, practiced in the various laboratories in which the School is divided, contribute, without any exception and in the aforementioned anonymous and collective form, to create an organic and unitary artistic product, a "total work of art" which must respond to the address given by the master architect (Polvara himself), to whom devotion, respect and obedience are due. The architectural design is therefore assigned great importance and this means that the best representative works of the Beato Angelico School are those sacred buildings entirely made with the intervention of its laboratories for all or almost all the decorations, furnishings, furnishings and Milanese churches of S. Maria Beltrade, S. Vito al Giambellino, S. MM. Nabore and Felice, or the church of S. Eusebio in Agrate Brianza and the chapel of the religious institute of the daughters of S. Eusebio in Vercelli). As for the expressive languages used by the School (the so-called "style"), the preference for modern architectural rationalism is highlighted - a topic of stringent topicality, to which Polvara did not fail to give his personal theoretical and practical contribution - and that for Divisionism in painting, indebted to the ancient admiration for the work of Gaetano Previati. The interaction of these two forms gives rise to a recognizable language, modern and spiritual at the same time, verifiable in the buildings as in the individual works, the result of a profound sensitivity that combines the thoughtful recovery of some forms of the past (for example early Christian iconography reused in the decorative motifs of the vestments or in the shape of some artifacts, from the chalice to the tabernacle, to the chasuble-chasuble) with the impetus for a modern and functional style appropriate to the times but respectful of tradition.
PANIZON, ERMANNA. "Figure senza nome nelle storie dipinte del Cinquecento italiano". Doctoral thesis, 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/2158/870721.
Texto completoLibros sobre el tema "Immagine sacra"
Langé, Santino. Immagini, luoghi, spazi del sacro. Siena: Cantagalli, 2014.
Buscar texto completoCaramico, Virginia. Il sacro speco di Subiaco illustrato: Topografia sacra e narrazione per immagini fra Due e Trecento. Firenze: Mandragora, 2020.
Buscar texto completoFabietti, Ugo. Materia sacra: Corpi, oggetti, immagini, feticci nella pratica religiosa. Milano: Raffallo Cortina editore, 2014.
Buscar texto completoPaolo, Campione Francesco, ed. Sacre conversazioni: Immagini dell'Annunciazione nei musei siciliani. Palermo: Edizioni di passaggio, 2007.
Buscar texto completoBrenk, Beat. Architettura e immagini del sacro nella tarda antichità. Spoleto (Perugia): Centro italiano di studi sull'alto Medioevo, 2005.
Buscar texto completoMichael. Per la restaurazione delle venerande e sacre immagini. Roma: Accademia nazionale dei Lincei, 1990.
Buscar texto completoArchitettura e immagini del sacro nella tarda antichità. Spoleto (Perugia): Centro italiano di studi sull'alto Medioevo, 2005.
Buscar texto completoStefano, Della Torre, ed. Discorso intorno alle immagini sacre e profane (1582). Città del Vaticano: Libreria editrice vaticana, 2002.
Buscar texto completoBernocchi, Francesco. Moneta e devozione: Le offerte alla Sacra cintola, gli Angiò e le immagini sacre nelle monete tra Medioevo e Rinascimento a Prato. Prato: [s.n.], 2013.
Buscar texto completoVittorio, Natale y Museo Borgogna (Vercelli Italy), eds. Verso il Sacro Monte: Immagini della passione nel Quattrocento. Biella: Eventi & Progetti, 2006.
Buscar texto completoCapítulos de libros sobre el tema "Immagine sacra"
"Gerusalemme crociata e le immagini sacre: exempla, notazioni estetiche e accenti devozionali nelle fonti medievali". En Crusades, 81–98. Routledge, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315271583-5.
Texto completoActas de conferencias sobre el tema "Immagine sacra"
Decandia, Lidia. "Percorsi e terre di mezzo: dai cammini degli antenati ai luoghi dell'incontro e della festa contemporanei: il museo mater di Mamoiada". En International Conference Virtual City and Territory. Roma: Centre de Política de Sòl i Valoracions, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.5821/ctv.7975.
Texto completoInformes sobre el tema "Immagine sacra"
Vallerani, Sara, Elizabeth Storer y Costanza Torre. Considerazioni chiave: equità e partecipazione nella promozione della vaccinazione per il covid-19 tra le persone razzializzate e senza documenti. SSHAP, mayo de 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/sshap.2022.025.
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