
Fernando Gallego and His Workshop: The Altarpiece from Ciudad Rodrigo
One of the most important art works produced in late fifteenth-century Spain is the group of twenty-six panels from the altarpiece of the cathedral of Ciudad Rodrigo, Castile. The panels rank among the most beautiful and iconographically ambitious works by two of Castile's great late medieval painters, Fernando Gallego and the virtually unknown Master Bartolome. All twenty-six panels are part of the Samuel H. Kress Collection and were given to the University of Arizona Museum of Art in Tuscon in 1957.This major publication sheds new light on the altarpiece and its context, and includes essays on the physical life of the altarpiece itself; Fernando Gallego and the Hispano-Flemish tradition in Spain; Master Bartolome and millennialism in late fifteenth-century Castile; the infra-red reflectography, pigment and medium analysis of the panels; and the role of prints in the altarpiece. These essays together highlight the individual techniques and workshop practices within the context of the cosmopolitan communities of gothic Castile. Full catalogue entries for each of the panels complete the work.The project represents a groundbreaking international collaboration between institutions and scholars headed by the Meadows Museum in close collaboration with the University of Arizona Museum of Art, the Getty Research Institute and the Kimbell Art Museum, whose conservation studio oversaw the technical analysis of the panels.
Among the scholars contributing their expertise to the project are authorities on Spanish art and conservation, including Mark A. Roglan (Meadows Museum), Barbara C. Anderson (Getty Research Institute), Claire Barry (Kimbell Art Museum), Amanda W. Dotseth (Meadows Museum), Pilar Silva Maroto (Prado Museum), Michael Schilling (Getty Research Institute), and Inge Fielder (Art Institute of Chicago). Major funding for this publication has been given by the Meadows Foundation and the Samuel H. Kress Foundation.
Author: Barbara C. Anderson
Format: Hardback, 336 pages, 248mm x 280mm
Published: 2008, Philip Wilson Publishers Ltd, United Kingdom
Genre: Fine Arts / Art History
One of the most important art works produced in late fifteenth-century Spain is the group of twenty-six panels from the altarpiece of the cathedral of Ciudad Rodrigo, Castile. The panels rank among the most beautiful and iconographically ambitious works by two of Castile's great late medieval painters, Fernando Gallego and the virtually unknown Master Bartolome. All twenty-six panels are part of the Samuel H. Kress Collection and were given to the University of Arizona Museum of Art in Tuscon in 1957.This major publication sheds new light on the altarpiece and its context, and includes essays on the physical life of the altarpiece itself; Fernando Gallego and the Hispano-Flemish tradition in Spain; Master Bartolome and millennialism in late fifteenth-century Castile; the infra-red reflectography, pigment and medium analysis of the panels; and the role of prints in the altarpiece. These essays together highlight the individual techniques and workshop practices within the context of the cosmopolitan communities of gothic Castile. Full catalogue entries for each of the panels complete the work.The project represents a groundbreaking international collaboration between institutions and scholars headed by the Meadows Museum in close collaboration with the University of Arizona Museum of Art, the Getty Research Institute and the Kimbell Art Museum, whose conservation studio oversaw the technical analysis of the panels.
Among the scholars contributing their expertise to the project are authorities on Spanish art and conservation, including Mark A. Roglan (Meadows Museum), Barbara C. Anderson (Getty Research Institute), Claire Barry (Kimbell Art Museum), Amanda W. Dotseth (Meadows Museum), Pilar Silva Maroto (Prado Museum), Michael Schilling (Getty Research Institute), and Inge Fielder (Art Institute of Chicago). Major funding for this publication has been given by the Meadows Foundation and the Samuel H. Kress Foundation.
