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A guide for family researchers of Italian descent points the way to resources in the United States as well as information available in the town halls, archives, churches, and libraries of Italy.
Subject matter consists of representational arts in the broadest sense, architecture, sculpture, painting, and other man-made objects with no limits as to time, place, or cultural environment.
The J. Paul Getty Museum Journal 9 is a compendium of articles and notes pertaining to the Museum's permanent collections of antiquities, paintings, and sculpture and works of art. This volume includes an Editorial Statement by the Journal’s editors: Burton B. Fredericksen, Curator of Paintings, Jiří Frel, Curator of Antiquities, and Gillian Wilson, Curator of Decorative Arts. Conservation problems will be discussed along with the articles written by Dietrich Von Bothmer, Martha Ohly-Dumm, Martin Robertson, R. M. Cook, Bonnie M. Kingsley, Mario A. Del Chiaro, Maxwell L. Anderson, Fikret K. Yegül, Jiří Frel, Catherine Lees-Causey, Roy Kotansky, A. E. Raubitschek, Stanley M. Burstein, Stéphanie Boucher, Jerry Podany, Zdravko Barov, George R. Goldner, Maurizio Marini, Burton B. Fredericksen, Sir Francis Watson, and Adrian Sassoon.
Caravaggio was one of the most important Italian painters of the 17th century. He was, in fact, the wellspring of Baroque painting. In Hibbard's words, Caravaggio's paintings "speak to us more personally and more poignantly than any others of the time". In this study, Howard Hibbard evaluates the work of Caravaggio: notorious as a painter-assassin, hailed by many as an original interpreter of the scriptures, a man whose exploration of nature has been likened to that of Galileo.
A catalogue of 373 masterpieces from the Linsky's collection of European paintings, medieval and Renaissance objets d'art, sculpture, jewelry, furniture, carpets, clocks, gilt bronzes, and porcelains. -- Metropolitan Museum of Art website.