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The History Of Painting In Italy Volume Vi Part 89

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Another invention of F. Sebastiano del Piombo, iii. 107.

Painting on dressed leather, ii. 176, on earthen vases, ii. 171, on gla.s.s, i. 224.

Perspective well understood by the ancients, iii. 48, 249.

Particularly cultivated by the Lombards, iv. 217.

Excellent professors of it. _ib._, and tom. i. 215, 274, 425, 426, ii.



24, 335, iii. 48, 249, 270.

Its revival at Bologna, v. 205, 206, _et seq._ _See also the end of last epoch of the same school, as well as in other schools._

_Pietre dure_, works in _commesso_, or variegated stone, more particularly conducted at Florence, and sometimes with the minuteness of the mosaic worker, i. 332.

Plagues in Italy proved injurious to painting, ii. 262, iii. 273, v. 419.

Play obscured many excellent qualities of Guido, v. 143.

Caused the death of Schedone, iv. 59.

Pleasure renders artists less correct, ii. 402, v. 64.

Portraits, very excellent, ii. 79, 237, iii. 146.

Celebrated portrait painters of the Venetian school; _see_ t.i.tian, Contarino, Morone, Tinelli, Ghislandi.

Others of every school, at the close of their respective epochs.

Q.

Quadratura, _see_ Perspective.

Quattrocentisti.

Artists of the fourteenth century, their dry but exact design, i. 103.

They professed various arts at once.

Simple in their composition, iii. 45, v. 26, and elsewhere.

Question respecting the superior dignity of painting and sculpture, i.

253.

R.

Removing of paintings from walls to canva.s.s, v. 350.

Revival of painting in Italy. Its origin, i. 1.

Restoration of ancient paintings, when cautiously conducted, highly useful, ii. 84, iii. 294.

Recommended by Bonarruoti and by the Caracci, at Bologna and Florence, v. 14.

School for such art at Venice, iii. 389.

Not successfully applied to the Supper of Vinci, at Milan, iv. 247; To various Venetian pictures, by Bombelli, iii. 294, and elsewhere.

Method discovered at Siena, i. 455.

Rome, dignifies the ideas brought by foreign artists from other parts, ii. 16.

Character of the school, ii. 105.

Circ.u.mstances which there a.s.sisted the progress of the art, ii. 341.

S.

Saloon, royal, in the Vatican, ii. 127.

Others at Rome, i. 277, ii. 128, 203, 204.

Of the Pitti, at Florence, i. 300.

Of the Palazzo Vecchio, i. 192, 248.

Of the ducal palace at Venice, iii. 192, 225, &c.

In Genoa, v. 243.

Scagliola, works in, i. 346, iv. 70.

Sea views, painters of, i. 326, ii. 248, 332, 444, iii. 385, v. 204.

Slowness of artists, remarked in Ricciarelli, ii. 127.

Punished in Laureti, ii. 151.

Proverbial with some, i. 161, 416, v. 97.

Injurious, 267, 268, 343.

Corrected in Agostino Caracci, v. 97.

_See also_ Diligence.

Selection of style to be made according to the genius and disposition of the artist, i. 248, 307, 416.

Surnames of painters, confounded and altered, _see_ Lamberto, Da Leccio, Sanmartino, &c.

Derived by masters from their native place, and sometimes from that of their residence. _See_ Orsi, Lotto, &c.

Murati, ii. 41, iii. 120.

Statues, of Bonarruoti, i. 165, 166.

Of Verrocchio, i. 151.

Where it may be observed, that the Horse of Venice, which was cast by him, and did not succeed, was newly cast by Alessandro Leopardo, a Venetian. _Temanza._ Modelled by Vinci, _ib._; by Raffaello, ii. 82.

Symbolical representations of living personages, borrowed from the history of ill.u.s.trious ancients, i. 257, ii. 68.

T.

Tastes in painting, laudable, though different, i. 231.

A certain taste not to be hastily changed at an advanced age, i. 205, 308, 417, v. 195, 196, and elsewhere.

Tapestries, i. 45, 6, ii. 82, 343, v. 207, 308.

Tenebrosi.

A sect of painters in Venice, iii. 276, and in Bologna, v. 194.

Partly occasioned by the bad priming colours, used also elsewhere, i.

283, iii. 276, v. 108; And the models of Caravaggio badly imitated, iv. 185.

Theatres. Artists distinguished for decorating them, i. 217, 18. iv. 70.

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