The Italian Paintings Before 1400 National Gallery Catalogues Dillian Gordon

Series:
National Gallery London
Format:
Hardback
Publication date:
03 Jun 2011
ISBN:
9781857094824
Dimensions:
568 pages: 285 x 216 x 43mm
Illustrations:
500 colour illustrations approx.

The National Gallery houses one of the most important collections of early Italian paintings outside Italy, including works by Cimabue, Duccio, Ugolino di Nerio, Giotto, Bernardo Daddi and the Cioni brothers. Since these were last catalogued in 1988 there have been four exceptional new acquisitions: the thirteenth-century diptych now attributed to the Master of the Borgo Crucifix, The Virgin and Child by Cimabue, The Virgin and Child by the Clarisse Master and The Coronation of the Virgin by Bernardo Daddi. In 1989, following the systematic programme of examination jointly carried out by the National Gallery's curators, conservators and scientists, the National Gallery published Art in the Making: Italian Painting before 1400 which is acknowledged as a key source for information about the methods and materials of painting of this period. For the present volume, all but two works have been reexamined in the conservation studios, and this has revealed, through infrared reflectography, the significance of underdrawings in early Italian paintings, together with other new information regarding technique. In reviewing and in some cases reattributing the works catalogued here, the author takes account of the considerable body of new research published over the last twenty years, including that on paintings and fragments of paintings in other collections which are related to panels in the National Gallery.

Dillian Gordon was until recently Curator of Paintings before 1460 at the National Gallery, London. Among her many previous publications is "The Fifteenth-Century Italian Paintings," ""a volume in the ongoing series of new National Gallery Catalogues.

'A superb account of one of the world’s greatest collections of early Italian paintings, capable of opening the eyes of even the most practiced viewer' - Jonathan Sumption, Spectator

'Back in 1988, when making emendations to the smaller catalogue of her predecessor, Martin Davies, Dr Gordon described herself as a 'dwarf standing on a giant’s shoulders'. This latest publication of hers leaves no doubt that she has become a giant herself' -Alexander Murray, Times Literary Supplement

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