search for books and compare prices
Sybille Ebert-schifferer has written 4 work(s)
Search for other authors with the same name
displaying 1 to 4 | at end
show results in order: alphabetically | oldest to newest | newest to oldest
Cover for 9783777490519 Cover for 9783777490311 Cover for 9781606060957 Cover for 9781606060421
cover image for 9783777490519
By Sybille Ebert-schifferer (editor), Elisabeth Kieven (editor), Jorg Stabenow (contributor) and Marieke von Bernstorff (contributor)

Hardcover:

9783777490519, titled "100 Jahre Bibliotheca Hertziana: Die Geschichte Des Instituts 1913–2013; Der Palazzo Zuccari Und Die Institutsgebaude 1590–2013" | Hirmer Verlag, November 30, 2013, cover price $200.00

cover image for 9783777490311
Product Description: In 1912 Henriette Hertz (1846 –1913) bequeathed the Roman Palazzo Zuccari to the Kaiser-Wilhelm-Gesellschaft society with the aim of founding an institute dedicated to “research into art and culture with a particular connection to Rome”...read more

Hardcover:

9783777490311 | Hirmer Verlag, April 30, 2013, cover price $135.00 | About this edition: In 1912 Henriette Hertz (1846 –1913) bequeathed the Roman Palazzo Zuccari to the Kaiser-Wilhelm-Gesellschaft society with the aim of founding an institute dedicated to “research into art and culture with a particular connection to Rome”.

cover image for 9781606060421
Product Description: When works of art created for religious purposes outlive their original function, they often take on new meanings as they move from sacred spaces to secular collections. Religious art embodies a complicated amalgam of the aesthetic and the numinous, and the fourteen essays in this volume explore how the admixture changes—oftenradically—with changes of function, setting, audience, and the passage of time...read more
By Sybille Ebert-schifferer (editor) and Gail Feigenbaum (editor)

Paperback:

9781606060421 | J Paul Getty Museum Pubns, January 18, 2011, cover price $30.00 | About this edition: When works of art created for religious purposes outlive their original function, they often take on new meanings as they move from sacred spaces to secular collections.

displaying 1 to 4 | at end