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  1. 10 de ago. de 2022 · 1.1 An Introduction to Black Plague Art; 1.2 What Was the Medieval Bubonic Plague? 1.3 The Emergence of Plague Artworks and the Black Death Paintings; 2 Famous Bubonic Plague Paintings. 2.1 Madonna of Humility (1345-1350) by Guariento di Arpo; 2.2 Persecution of the Jews (c. 1350) by Gilles li Muisis

  2. 9 de mar. de 2020 · 1. Tournai Citizens Burying the Dead During the Black Death, 14th century. The Citizens of Tournai, Belgium, Burying the Dead During the Black Death of 1347-52. Detail of a miniature from The Chronicles of Gilles Li Muisis (1272-1352), abbot of the monastery of St. Martin of the Righteous, Bibliothèque royale de Belgique, MS 13076-77, f. 24v.

  3. 15 de ene. de 2019 · Many of the included artworks focus on humanity’s helplessness against nature—an anxiety that plagues us today more than ever. Alfred William Hunt’s Study for Tynemouth Pier—Lighting the Lamps at Sundown (ca. 1863), for example, features two diminutive figures on a rickety wooden dock towards the left side of the canvas ...

  4. 14 de may. de 2020 · By Andrea Kirsh May 14, 2020. This third edition of "Art Following Epidemics" by Art Historian Andrea Kirsh provides a snapshot of important works on paper following the Black Death and the infiltration of death imagery in European art for more than two centuries following the plague.

  5. 18 de may. de 2020 · How have artists portrayed epidemics through history – and what can the art tell us about then and now? Emily Kasriel explores the art of plague from the Black Death to current times.

  6. Victorian dying was informed by the concept of a ‘good’ or ‘bad’ death. The ‘good’ death, as historians such as Mary Riso and Pat Jalland have explained, was derived from the medieval concept of ‘ars moriendi’, or ‘the art of dying’, and was codified in terms of a series of elements. In the words of Catherine Arnold, the ...

  7. 27 de dic. de 2018 · Olivia Hicks explores the tropes and meanings of 'Black Death Art'. The plague outbreak from 1347 to 1352, known as the Black Death, resulted in the deaths of between one third and one half of all living Europeans, and around a third of those in the affected Middle East – estimated at over 50 million human lives.