Results 171 to 180 of about 74,042 (214)
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The Historic Significance of Stucco Decoration in Persian Architecture

Art Bulletin, 1934
Just when the art of stucco first appeared in Iranian architecture cannot yet be determined. It certainly was richly developed by Parthian times, for although we have only meager remains of this st...
A. Pope
exaly   +3 more sources

NEW VIEWS ON A STUCCO DECORATION FROM THE ALMORAVID PERIOD IN AL-ANDALUS

Proceedings of the 24th International Academic Conference, Barcelona, 2016
This paper presents study and publish to stucco cladding dating back to the era of Almoravid State in Andalusia, the cladding decorated portico of the entrance to one of the hall that belongs to the Palace of Pinohermoso, which was located in Xativa Andalusian.
Ramadan Mamoon
exaly   +3 more sources

A Comparative Study of the Execution Method of the Koshtehbori Stucco Decoration with other Stucco Decorations in Safavid Period Architecture

Parseh Journal of Archaeological Studies
During the Safavid period, innovations were created in Stucco decorations. the Koshtehbori Stucco decoration is one of the most attractive and unique architectural decorations of the Safavid period, which was implemented with various motifs in some of ...
Mohammadjavad Najafian   +2 more
exaly   +3 more sources

Composition and Technology of the 17th Century Stucco Decorations at Červená Lhota Castle in Southern Bohemia

International Journal of Architectural Heritage, 2020
A high relief stucco decoration from the Great Chamber of the castle Cervena Lhota in the Southern Bohemia was surveyed and characterised as a part of its planned conservation.
Jan Válek   +2 more
exaly   +4 more sources

Stucco Decoration in Pre-Augustan Italy

Papers of the British School at Rome, 1972
Fifty years ago, when Miss E. L. Wadsworth (Mrs. H. F. Cleland) wrote her monograph on Roman stucco reliefs, still the basic study of the subject, the earliest decorations that she examined in detail were those of a house discovered in the grounds of the Villa Farnesina in Rome.
R. Ling
openaire   +2 more sources

DOMESTIC DECORATION: Mosaics and stucco

2009
Throughout the documented history of domestic decoration at Pompeii,1 twothemes remain constant: the coordination of floor, wall and ceiling decoration, and the relation of these ensembles of mosaic, painting and stucco to the function of the spaces they adorned (cf. Strocka, Ch. 20).2 The coordination of systems for decorating the interior surfaces of
exaly   +2 more sources

Abbasid Architectural Stucco Decoration from Excavations at the Friday Mosque of Isfahan

is book addresses a complete corpus of Islamic stucco, analysed within its archaeological stratigraphic context. e nds mostly pertain to the two Abbasid phases of the Friday Mosque of Isfahan (767 and 840–41 CE), excavated in the 1970s by the Italian Archaeological Mission in Iran directed by Umberto Scerrato.
A. Corsi
openaire   +3 more sources

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