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I have a framed print of “The Virgin of the Rocks.” The mystery of why there are two is still a mystery. Both were originally done on very large wood panels, but transferred to canvas. Who would dare undertake such a task?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transfer_of_panel_paintings
These are amazing, thank you for sharing!
Maybe when you start your next series, you might find a few gems of wisdom to share from within the confines of the covers to which Vasari's book is ensconced.Encyclopedias and history books all seem to point out that the word Renaissance is French for “rebirth”. However, the Italian painter Giorgio Vasari was probably the first person to describe this era as the “Renaissance” when he used the word, "rinascit". In 1568 he authored a book called, “Le vita de’ pi eccellenti architetti, pittori, ed scultori italiani” (“The Lives of the Most Eminent Italian Architects, Painters, and Sculptors“) the title more commonly used is, “Lives of the Artists”. Vasari applied this concept specifically to a “revival”, or “rebirth”. In the chapter titled “Andrea di Cione, Spinello, Dello, and Paolo Uccello” where he wrote;
“In the year 1350 was formed the Company and Fraternity of the Painters in Florence, for the masters were there in great numbers, and they considered that the arts of design had been born again in Tuscany, and indeed in Florence itself.”