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3,088 results for Relief plaque

Image for American Relief Sculpture
Essay

American Relief Sculpture

October 1, 2006

By Thayer Tolles

Also executed on a domestic scale for private patrons, relief portraits and ideal subjects (drawn from history, mythology, literature, or the Bible) were considered desirable alternatives to the standard in-the-round busts or statues.
Image for What are the angels on this enameled plaque bearing witness to?
video

What are the angels on this enameled plaque bearing witness to?

October 9, 2013

By Barbara Drake Boehm

"We’re seeing in the angels what we see in one another when we’re in difficult times."
Image for Prague, 1347–1437
Essay

Prague, 1347–1437

February 1, 2014

By Barbara Drake Boehm

Holy Roman Emperor Charles IV gilded Prague’s royal towers “so that they might powerfully shine and gleam at a far distance in fair weather.”
Image for Prague during the Rule of Rudolf II (1583–1612)
Essay

Prague during the Rule of Rudolf II (1583–1612)

November 1, 2013

By Jacob Wisse

Prague became, under Rudolf's guidance, one of the leading centers of the arts and sciences on the continent.
Image for Home Is a Foreign Place
video

Home Is a Foreign Place

May 23, 2020
Join a Met curator to explore Home Is a Foreign Place, a suite of 36 woodcut prints on handmade paper by the artist Zarina.
Image for Prague, The Crown of Bohemia, 1347–1437
Prague, the Gothic jewel of the kingdom of Bohemia and capital of the modern Czech Republic, has been lauded by poets as "the dream of delirious architects" whose "magic needs no wand." Today, after decades of political isolation, the city again draws throngs of tourists eager to see its imposing castle, its soaring cathedral and mighty bridge. Yet many do not realize how much of Prague's fairy tale skyline and how many of its treasures were created after Charles IV established his new European capital on the banks of the Vltava in the fourteenth century. Son of the king of Bohemia and grandson of the Holy Roman Emperor, Charles was an erudite and devout prince, educated in Paris and linked by bonds of kinship to the courts of Europe. After he assumed his father's throne in 1347, he transformed Prague into a royal capital meant to rival Paris and Rome. He rebuilt Prague Castle with golden towers to shine both east and west, founded the first university in central Europe, and initiated a massive building campaign to glorify Saint Vitus's Cathedral. When Charles was crowned Holy Roman Emperor in 1355, court and church commissions redoubled throughout his vast empire. After Charles's death in 1378, his son Wenceslas IV found himself increasingly embroiled in political and religious turmoil. Wenceslas's weaknesses as a ruler notwithstanding, art in Bohemia reached its apogee during his reign. The disparate artistic traditions Charles had brought to Prague from across Europe had coalesced into a distinctive aesthetic known as "The Beautiful Style," recognizably "made in Prague." Wenceslas's half brother Sigismund, king of Hungary and later Holy Roman Emperor, succeeded to the throne of Bohemia in 1419. Because of the unrest that continued there, he maintained his court in Buda. Like his father and brother before him, Sigismund lavishly decorated his residences and commissioned sumptuous works of art. In 1436–37, the final year of his life, he at last gained control of Prague. Prague, The Crown of Bohemia, 1347–1437, the companion to a landmark exhibition at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, celebrates the remarkable flowering of art that took place in Prague as the city emerged as a European cultural capital. In essays and entries on works of art drawn from Czech, other European, and American collections, an esteemed group of scholars elucidate this compelling chapter in European history. Among the nearly 200 objects are paintings, including panels by Master Theodoric from the Holy Cross Chapel at Karlstejn Castle; goldsmiths' work from Saint Vitus's Cathedral that has not been exhibited for decades; sculpture; drawings, including an artist's model book with its original carrying case; stained glass; embroideries from ecclesiastical vestments; and illuminated manuscripts from the personal collection of Wenceslas IV. These precious objects bear witness to the achievements of the hundreds of artists trained and active in Prague and its rulers' dominions during this spectacular century.
Image for Plaque
Art

Plaque

Workshop of Charles Fromery (1685–1738)

Date: ca. 1730
Accession Number: 17.190.1021

Image for Plaque
Art

Plaque

Chelsea Keramic Art Works (1872–1889)

Date: ca. 1878–82
Accession Number: 2018.294.28

Image for Plaque
Art

Plaque

Caroline H. Rimmer (1851–1918)

Date: ca. 1895–1900
Accession Number: 2018.294.190

Image for Relief plaque with ram's head

Date: ca. 400–30 B.C.
Accession Number: 2021.41.167

Image for Relief plaque depicting a royal figure

Date: 3rd century B.C.
Accession Number: 2021.41.82

Image for Relief plaque with quail chick

Date: 400–30 B.C.
Accession Number: 07.228.8

Image for Relief plaque with a swallow

Date: 400–30 B.C.
Accession Number: 07.228.9

Image for Ivory decorative plaque

Date: 2nd half of 7th century BCE
Accession Number: 17.190.73

Image for Terracotta relief plaque with head of Medusa

Date: 2nd century BCE
Accession Number: 98.8.28

Image for Terracotta relief plaque with head of Medusa

Date: 2nd century BCE
Accession Number: 98.8.27