Rare, Known and Unknown … Research Excerpts from the Catalogue: Old Master Drawings. From the 15th Century to the 1820s. Netherlandish, Flemish and Dutch Schools. Lecture by dr hab. Jolanta Talbierska

Note! This is an archival entry.
The latest events are available here.

The promotion of catalogues assumed the organisation of scientific conference and the presentation of original works in the Print Room of the University of Warsaw Library. Unfortunately, these plans has been modified due to the restrictions on public activity caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. Nevertheless, authors have prepared audiovisual materials; short videos and longer recorded lectures on chosen aspects discussed in their publications. Videos will be presented in a chronological order, starting with the 16th-century Barthel and Sebald Behams’ prints. In the following weeks, drawings by the Netherlandish, Flemish and Dutch Schools’ masters will be presented, then works of Polish draughtsmen active in the 18th and 19th century and finally the architectonical and decorative drawings by Tilman van Gameren.
Listen to the stories about these fascinating works on paper!

dr hab. Jolanta Talbierska, Rare, Known and Unknown … Research Excerpts from the Catalogue: Old Master Drawings. From the 15th Century to the 1820s. Netherlandish, Flemish and Dutch Schools

 

In this lecture old master drawings by the Netherlandish school and some chosen examples from the collection of the Print Room of the University of Warsaw Library are presented. They were created between the fifteenth and eighteenth century. We can listen about drawings by very famous artists such as Rubens or Rembrandt as well as not well-known works which are interested due to their style or composition and even very rare examples in terms of authorship or subject. The Keeper of the Print Room, dr hab. Jolanta Talbierska, presents chosen artists and indicates the characteristic features of their drawings as far as their technique, composition and subject are concerned.

     

Icons: Freepik (www.freepik.com) from www.flaticon.com, Retina Display Icons (www.iconfinder.com/iconsets/TWG_Retina_Icons) from The Working Group (blog.twg.ca).