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Iconography

A Companion to Medieval Art, 2019
Shirin Fozi
semanticscholar   +3 more sources

The Tiwanaku Camelid Sacrificer: origins and transformations of animal iconography in the context of Middle Horizon (A.D. 400–1100) state expansion

Nawpa Pacha, 2019
Prehispanic Andean iconography communicated ideology and structures of power. On the coast, iconography depicting violence and fertility legitimized elite power. In Tiwanaku (A.D. 400–1100), such iconography is considered to have been absent.
S. Baitzel, David E. Trigo Rodríguez
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Religious Iconography

2016
Text covers one field of iconographic studies - religious iconography. It tackles problems of Christological, Mariological and hagiographic subjects, iconographic topography, differences in iconography between west and east and development of selected iconographic themes during centuries.
openaire   +1 more source

Iconography

2020
Abstract Wherever one finds rich picture-making practices, one tends to find iconography. The painting of a well-dressed young woman standing next to a bladed wheel, for example, represents St Catherine of Alexandria. Iconographic interpretation is reading pictures as having singular contents, like St Catherine, but the operation that ...
openaire   +2 more sources

Monuments, power and contested space— the iconography of Sackville Street (O'Connell Street) before independence (1922)

Irish Geography, 2014
This paper explores the iconography of Dublin's central thoroughfare, O'Connell Street, formerly Sackville Street, as it evolved in the decades before Independence.
Yvonne Whelan
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Comics and the Iconography of Illness

Graphic Medicine Manifesto, 2020
Ian Williams
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Iconography

2001
Abstract Zeus was a son of Rhea and her brother Kronos. Kronos had been told by Uranos and Ge that his own son would overthrow him.
openaire   +1 more source

Iconography

2017
Images from archaeological sites are often engaging, sometimes mysterious, and always seem full of potential for insight into the lives and thoughts of people from the past. Unfortunately, most research into archaeological images relies on a narrow range of art historical methods and on parallels with ethnographic information.
Marit K. Munson, Kelley Hays-Gilpin
openaire   +1 more source

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