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Books with title In the Renaissance

  • The Renaissance

    Anna Claybourne

    Library Binding (Raintree, Sept. 13, 2007)
    How can you make Renaissance-style hot chocolate? Which Renaissance genius came up with the world’s first helicopter design? How did Renaissance people use turnips to cure the common cold? This title unravels the mysteries of life in Europe in the 15th and 16th centuries. Find out what staying in an Italian palace was really like, how to win friends in Renaissance high society, and where you could go to the theatre for only a penny.
  • The renaissance

    James L Steffensen

    Unknown Binding (Golden Press, March 15, 1966)
    None
  • Harlem Renaissance, The

    Jim Haskins

    Library Binding (Millbrook Press, March 1, 1996)
    Chronicles the early twentieth-century artistic and intellectual revolution in black America.
    Z
  • The Renaissance

    Neil Grant

    Hardcover (F. Watts, March 15, 1971)
    Describes some of the important political and cultural events and well-known people of the Renaissance.
  • The Renaissance

    Walter Pater

    Paperback (RareBooksClub.com, Sept. 13, 2013)
    Excerpt: ...a hand, rough enough by 118 contrast, working upon some fine hint or sketch of his. Sometimes, as in the subjects of the Daughter of Herodias and the Head of John the Baptist, the lost originals have been re-echoed and varied upon again and again by Luini and others. At other times the original remains, but has been a mere theme or motive, a type of which the accessories might be modified or changed; and these variations have but brought out the more the purpose, or expression of the original. It is so with the so-called Saint John the Baptist of the Louvre-one of the few naked figures Leonardo painted-whose delicate brown flesh and woman's hair no one would go out into the wilderness to seek, and whose treacherous smile would have us understand something far beyond the outward gesture or circumstance. But the long, reedlike cross in the hand, which suggests Saint John the Baptist, becomes faint in a copy at the Ambrosian Library, and disappears altogether in another version, in the Palazzo Rosso at Genoa. Returning from the latter to the original, we are no longer surprised by Saint John's strange likeness to the Bacchus which hangs near it, and which set Théophile Gautier thinking of Heine's notion of decayed gods, who, to maintain themselves, after the fall of paganism, took employment in the new religion. We recognise one of those symbolical inventions in which the ostensible subject is used, not as matter for definite pictorial realisation, but as the starting-point of a 119 train of sentiment, subtle and vague as a piece of music. No one ever ruled over the mere subject in hand more entirely than Leonardo, or bent it more dexterously to purely artistic ends. And so it comes to pass that though he handles sacred subjects continually, he is the most profane of painters; the given person or subject, Saint John in the Desert, or the Virgin on the knees of Saint Anne, is often merely the pretext for a kind of work which carries one altogether...
  • The Renaissance

    Walter Pater

    Leather Bound (Boni & Liveright, March 15, 1919)
    None
  • The Renaissance

    Walter Pater

    Paperback (Tutis Digital Publishing Pvt. Ltd., March 20, 2008)
    None
  • The Harlem Renaissance

    Adam Scgaefer, A. R. Schaefer

    Library Binding (Heinemann/Raintree, July 1, 2003)
    Describes the time period known as the Harlem Renaissance, during which African American artists, poets, writers, thinkers, and musicians flourished in Harlem, New York.
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  • The Renaissance: Movements in Art

    Anne Fitzpatrick

    Hardcover (Creative Education, July 1, 2008)
    Presents information about the artistic movements of the Renaissance, as well as the social, cultural, and historical circumstances that framed them.
    Z
  • The Harlem Renaissance

    Stuart A. Kallen

    Library Binding (Lucent Books, May 29, 2009)
    Overview of the African American cultural movement that began in the 1920s and was centered in Harlem, New York.
    Y
  • Everyday Life in the Renaissance

    Neil Morris

    Hardcover (McRae Books, Jan. 1, 2008)
    Traces developments in European art, architecture, music, theater, literature, science, warfare, and exploration during Renaissance times. Includes overlays.
    N
  • The Italian Renaissance

    None

    Library Binding (Marshall Cavendish Corp, March 1, 1989)
    Describes the life and times of Leonardo da Vinci, Michelangelo, and Galileo.
    X