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altarpiece |
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altarpiece![]() The Ascension of Christ into Heaven, by Italian painter and engraver Andrea Mantegna, is part of a triptych (three-panel altarpiece). In this, the left panel, the people stand in awe, in statuesque poses. Mantegna tried to set his picture in the Roman period to which it belonged, and has made a careful study of clothing from Roman statues. A painting (more rarely a sculpture) placed on, behind, or above an altar in a Christian church. Altarpieces vary greatly in size, construction, and number of images (diptych, triptych, and polyptych). Some are small and portable; some (known as a retable or reredos - there is no clear distinction) are fixed. A typical Italian altarpiece has a large central panel, flanked by subsidiary panels, with a predella, or strip of scenes, across the bottom. Spanish altarpieces tend to be architecturally elaborate retables. A popular form in northern Europe was the winged altarpiece, in which outer wings are hinged so that they can be closed to cover the centre panel; the backs of the panels are usually painted in a less elaborate fashion. Outstanding altarpieces include Duccio's Maestà (1308-11, Cathedral Museum, Siena), Mathias Grünewald's Isenheim Altarpiece (c. 1515, Unterlinden Museum, Colmar), and Jan van Eyck's Adoration of the Lamb (1432, St Bavon, Ghent).
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| The young Dominican's first major commission, painted between
1419 and 1421, was the main altarpiece for the church of San Domenico in
Fiesole. For example, his early reinterpretations of the
Annunciation as a single-panel altarpiece (Madrid and Cortona), where
painted architecture both proposed and transgressed the traditional
divisions of a triptych, were further developments of the Lorenzetti
experiments in the fourteenth century. The sixty-member Juilliard Choral Union joined the dancers upstage
in an altarpiece from which the dancers descended. |
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