The Kerch style / ˈ k ɜːr tʃ / , also referred to as Kerch vases , is an archaeological term describing vases from the final phase of Attic red-figure pottery production. Their exact chronology remains problematic, but they are generally assumed to have been produced roughly between 375 and 330/20 BC. The style is characterized by slender mannered figures and a polychromatism given to it by the use of white paint and gilding.
18-515: (Redirected from Lucca School ) [REDACTED] This article includes a list of references , related reading , or external links , but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations . Please help improve this article by introducing more precise citations. ( February 2022 ) ( Learn how and when to remove this message ) [REDACTED] 'Madonna and Child', tempera and gold on wood panel by an anonymous painter of
36-2984: A New History of Early Lucchese Painting , The Art Bulletin, Vol. 33, No. 1 (Mar., 1951), 11-31. Lasareff, Victor, Two Newly-Discovered Pictures of the Lucca School , The Burlington Magazine for Connoisseurs, Vol. 51, No. 293 (Aug., 1927), 56-67. Sturgis, Russell, A dictionary of architecture and building, biographical, historical, and descriptive , Vol. 2, New York, The Macmillan company, 1901, 565. v t e Premodern , Modern and Contemporary art movements List of art movements / periods Premodern (Western) Ancient Thracian Dacian Nuragic Aegean Cycladic Minoan Minyan ware Mycenaean Greek Sub-Mycenaean Protogeometric Geometric Orientalizing Archaic Black-figure Red-figure Severe style Classical Kerch style Hellenistic "Baroque" Indo-Greek Greco-Buddhist Neo-Attic Etruscan Scythian Iberian Gaulish Roman Republican Gallo-Roman Julio-Claudian Pompeian Styles Trajanic Severan Medieval Late antique Early Christian Coptic Ethiopian Migration Period Anglo-Saxon Hunnic Insular Lombard Visigothic Donor portrait Pictish Mozarabic Repoblación Viking Byzantine Iconoclast Macedonian Palaeologan Italo-Byzantine Frankish Merovingian Carolingian Pre-Romanesque Ottonian Romanesque Mosan Spanish Norman Norman-Sicilian Opus Anglicanum Gothic Gothic art in Milan International Gothic International Gothic art in Italy Lucchese school Crusades Novgorod school Duecento Sienese school Mudéjar Medieval cartography Italian school Majorcan school Mappa mundi Renaissance Italian Renaissance Trecento Proto-Renaissance Florentine school Pittura infamante Quattrocento Ferrarese school Forlivese school Venetian school Cinquecento High Renaissance Bolognese school Mannerism Counter- Maniera Northern Renaissance Early Netherlandish World landscape Ghent–Bruges school Northern Mannerism German Renaissance Cologne school Danube school Dutch and Flemish Renaissance Antwerp Mannerism Romanism Still life English Renaissance Tudor court Cretan school Turquerie Fontainebleau school Art of
54-773: A major collection of contemporary Southwestern United States and Mexican artists with an emphasis on Texas , New Mexico , and the border region including works by Ho Baron , Julie Bozzi , Carlos Callejo , Susan Davidoff , James Drake , Gaspar Enríquez , Vernon Fisher , Carmen Lomas Garza , Harry Geffert , Sam Gilliam , Gronk , Becky Hendrick, Anna Jaquez , Luis Jiménez , Donald Judd , Ida Lansky , Jim Love , Gilbert Lujan , James Magee, Melissa Miller , Jesús Moroles , Celia Álvarez Muñoz , Kermit Oliver , Ray Parish, Nadezda Prvulovic , Linda Ridgway , María Sada , Fritz Scholder , James Surls , Willie Varela , and Shane Wiggs. Other special collections include Pre-Columbian and Mexican colonial art, early 19th-century through
72-452: A number of workshops. Their end is also that of the Attic red-figure tradition. Recent research has thrown new light on this long-neglected field. The vases were first studied systematically by Karl Schefold . The most important scholar of Attic vase painting, John D. Beazley , only developed an interest in them late in his career; he did not agree with all of Schefold's views. In recent years,
90-410: Is located in downtown El Paso, Texas . First accredited in 1972, it is the only accredited art museum within a 250-mile radius and serves approximately 100,000 visitors per year. A new building was completed in 1998. In addition to its permanent collection and special exhibitions, the museum also offers art classes, film series, lectures, concerts, storytelling sessions and other educational programs to
108-556: Is often difficult. At the time of their production, Kerch style vases were exported to all of the Mediterranean region, but unlike earlier phases, the Black Sea area was the main market for this late phase of Attic pottery export. Most of the previously current vase shapes were still painted, but kraters , lekanes (see Typology of Greek Vase Shapes ) and pelikes were especially popular. The motifs are mostly scenes from
126-6398: The African diaspora African-American Caribbean Haitian Colonial Asian art Arts in the Philippines Letras y figuras Tipos del País Colonial Asian Baroque Company style Latin American art Casta painting Indochristian art Chilote school Cuzco school Quito school Latin American Baroque Art borrowing Western elements Islamic Moorish Manichaean Mughal Qajar Qing handicrafts Western influence in Japan Akita ranga Uki-e Transition to modern (c. 1770 – 1862) Romanticism Fairy painting Danish Golden Age Troubadour style Nazarene movement Purismo Shoreham Ancients Düsseldorf school Pre-Raphaelites Hudson River School American luminism Orientalism Norwich school Empire style Historicism Revivalism Biedermeier Realism Barbizon school Costumbrismo Verismo Macchiaioli Academic art Munich school in Greece Neo-Grec Etching revival Modern (1863–1944) 1863–1899 Neo-romanticism National romanticism Yōga Nihonga Japonisme Anglo-Japanese style Beuron school Hague school Peredvizhniki Impressionism American Hoosier Group Boston school Amsterdam Canadian Heidelberg school Aestheticism Arts and Crafts Art pottery Tonalism Decadent movement Symbolism Romanian Russian Volcano school Incoherents Post-Impressionism Neo-Impressionism Luminism Divisionism Pointillism Pont-Aven School Cloisonnism Synthetism Les Nabis American Barbizon school California tonalism Costumbrismo 1900–1914 Art Nouveau Art Nouveau in Milan Primitivism California Impressionism Secessionism School of Paris Munich Secession Vienna Secession Berlin Secession Sonderbund Pennsylvania Impressionism Mir iskusstva Ten American Painters Fauvism Expressionism Die Brücke Der Blaue Reiter Noucentisme Deutscher Werkbund American Realism Ashcan school Cubism Proto-Cubism Orphism A Nyolcak Neue Künstlervereinigung München Futurism Cubo-Futurism Art Deco Metaphysical Rayonism Productivism Synchromism Vorticism 1915–1944 Sosaku-hanga Suprematism School of Paris Crystal Cubism Constructivism Latin American Universal Constructivism Dada Shin-hanga Neoplasticism De Stijl Purism Return to order Novecento Italiano Figurative Constructivism Stupid Cologne Progressives Arbeitsrat für Kunst November Group Australian tonalism Dresden Secession Social realism Functionalism Bauhaus Kinetic art Anthropophagy Mingei Group of Seven New Objectivity Grosvenor school Neues Sehen Surrealism Iranian Latin American Mexican muralism Neo-Fauvism Precisionism Aeropittura Asso Scuola Romana Cercle et Carré Harlem Renaissance Kapists Regionalism California Scene Painting Heroic realism Socialist realism Nazi art Streamline Moderne Concrete art Abstraction-Création The Ten Dimensionism Boston Expressionism Leningrad school Contemporary and Postmodern (1945–present) 1945–1959 International Typographic Style Abstract expressionism Washington Color School Visionary art Vienna School of Fantastic Realism Spatialism Color field Lyrical abstraction Tachisme Arte Informale COBRA Nuagisme Generación de la Ruptura Jikken Kōbō Metcalf Chateau Mono-ha Nanyang Style Action painting American Figurative Expressionism in New York New media art New York school Hard-edge painting Bay Area Figurative Movement Les Plasticiens Gutai Art Association Gendai Bijutsu Kondankai Pop art Situationist International Soviet Nonconformist Ukrainian underground Lettrism Letterist International Ultra-Lettrist Florida Highwaymen Cybernetic art Antipodeans 1960–1969 Otra Figuración Afrofuturism Nueva Presencia ZERO Happening Neo-Dada Neo-Dada Organizers Op art Nouveau réalisme Nouvelle tendance Capitalist realism Art & Language Arte Povera Black Arts Movement The Caribbean Artists Movement Chicano art movement Conceptual art Land art Systems art Video art Minimalism Fluxus Generative art Post-painterly abstraction Intermedia Psychedelic art Nut Art Photorealism Environmental art Performance art Process art Institutional critique Light and Space Street art Feminist art movement in
144-749: The Black Sea coast of Crimea . The majority of these are now in the Hermitage Museum , St. Petersburg . It is not possible to set formal criteria which separate them stylistically from the contemporary plain style of late classical vase painting around painters like the Jena Painter or the Meleager Painter . The end of the Kerch style coincides with the end of red-figure painting as a whole. The identification of individual painters
162-642: The Master of the Bambino Vispo , Bartolomé Esteban Murillo , Giacomo Pacchiarotti , Andrea Previtali , Hyacinthe Rigaud , Pietro Rotari , Bernardo Strozzi , Anthony van Dyck , and Francisco Zurbarán . The permanent collection includes North American works of art by Manuel Gregorio Acosta , Frank Duveneck , Childe Hassam , George Inness , Manuel Neri , Rembrandt Peale , Frederic Remington , and Gilbert Stuart , among others. The museum has developed
180-803: The West Texas , Southern New Mexico and Ciudad Juarez , Mexico community. It is best known for its 57-piece Samuel H. Kress collection of 12th–18th-century European Art including works by Bernardo Bellotto , Benedetto Bonfigli , Canaletto , Giovanni Benedetto Castiglione , Vincenzo Catena , Giuseppe Maria Crespi , Carlo Crivelli , Vittore Crivelli , Macrino d'Alba , Jacopo da Sellaio , Nicolò da Voltri , Juan de Borgoña , Jacopo del Sellaio , Martino di Bartolomeo , Giovanni di Paolo , Giovanni Andrea de Ferrari , Sano di Pietro , Battista Dossi , Lavinia Fontana , Artemisia Gentileschi , Juan de Valdés Leal , Benvenuto Tisi (called il Garofalo) , Filippino Lippi , Lorenzo Lotto , Alessandro Magnasco ,
198-990: The Lucchese school, ca. 1200, El Paso Museum of Art The Lucchese school , also known as the school of Lucca and as the Pisan-Lucchese school , was a school of painting and sculpture that flourished in the 11th and 12th centuries in Pisa and Lucca in Tuscany with affinities to painters in Volterra . The art is mostly anonymous. Although not as elegant or delicate as the Florentine school , Lucchese works are remarkable for their monumentality. See also [ edit ] Bolognese school Florentine school School of Ferrara Sienese school References [ edit ] Garrison, Edward B., Toward
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#1732781085137216-1085: The Protestant Reformation and Counter-Reformation Catholic art Icon Lutheran art Digital art Fantastic art Folk art Hierarchy of genres Genre painting History painting Illuminated manuscript Illustration Interactive art Jewish art Kitsch Landscape painting Modernism Modern sculpture Late modernism Naïve art Outsider art Portrait Prehistoric European art Queer art Realism Shock art Trompe-l'œil Western painting [REDACTED] Category Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Lucchese_school&oldid=1244542161 " Categories : Italian art Painters from Tuscany Romanesque art Hidden categories: Articles lacking in-text citations from February 2022 All articles lacking in-text citations El Paso Museum of Art Founded in 1959, The El Paso Museum of Art (EPMA)
234-1989: The US Saqqakhaneh movement The Stars Art Group Tropicália Yoru no Kai Artificial intelligence art 1970–1999 Post-conceptual art Installation art Artscene Postminimalism Endurance art Sots Art Moscow Conceptualists Pattern and Decoration Pliontanism Punk art Neo-expressionism Transavantgarde Saint Soleil school Guerrilla art Lowbrow art Telematic art Appropriation art Neo-conceptual art New European Painting Tunisian collaborative painting Memphis Group Cyberdelic Neue Slowenische Kunst Scratch video Retrofuturism Young British Artists Superfiction Taring Padi Superflat New Leipzig school Artist-run initiative Artivism The Designers Republic Grunge design Verdadism 2000– present Amazonian pop art Altermodern Art for art Art game Art intervention Brandalism Classical Realism Contemporary African art Africanfuturism Contemporary Indigenous Australian art Crypto art Cyborg art Excessivism Fictive art Flat design Corporate Memphis Hypermodernism Hyperrealism Idea art Internet art Post-Internet iPhone art Kitsch movement Lightpainting Massurrealism Modern European ink painting Neo-futurism Neomodern Neosymbolism Passionism Post-YBAs Relational art Skeuomorphism Software art Sound art Stuckism Superflat SoFlo Superflat Superstroke Toyism Unilalianism Walking Artists Network Related topics History of art Abstract art Asemic writing Anti-art Avant-garde Ballets Russes Christian art Art in
252-602: The analysis of fourth-century BC Panathenaic amphorae from Eretria has provided new results. Additionally, it has been demonstrated that Kerch style vases were also produced outside Attica, for example in Chalkidiki . Generally, the South Italian red-figure vase production of the time was superior to the Attic Kerch Style. The South Italian production also continued somewhat longer. Representatives of
270-601: The fifth century BC. White, yellow and red were often used as additional colours. The casual painting of the backs of vases is another typical feature. The Marsyas Painter , the Eleusinian Painter and the Painter of Athens 12592 mark a short and final flourish in the quality of Attic vase painting. Shortly afterwards, the activities of the YZ Group painters produced a multitude of vases of inferior quality in
288-1056: The late 16th century in Milan 17th century Baroque Baroque in Milan Flemish Baroque Caravaggisti in Utrecht Tenebrism Louis XIII style Lutheran Baroque Stroganov school Animal painting Guild of Romanists Dutch Golden Age Delft school Capriccio Heptanese school Classicism Louis XIV style Poussinists and Rubenists 18th century Rococo Rocaille Louis XV style Frederician Chinoiserie Fête galante Neoclassicism Goût grec Louis XVI style Adam style Directoire style Neoclassical architecture in Milan Picturesque Colonial art Art of
306-407: The life of women (often exaggeratedly idyllic), dionysiac themes and subjects to do with Artemis and Demeter . Fighting griffins are another common subject. The figures are often elegant and highly decorated, and in some cases painters have emphasized certain stylistic qualities at the expense of naturalism. Details and ornamentation played an important role, the best works resemble examples from
324-420: The mid 20th-century American art, and a collection of works on paper including Old Master , 19th-century, and American Scene prints, reproductive engravings, and photographs. 31°45′31″N 106°29′25″W / 31.7586°N 106.4903°W / 31.7586; -106.4903 Kerch style The vases are thus named because a large quantity of them were found at Kerch (ancient Pantikapaion ) on
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