| Title | Michelangelo's design principles, particularly in relation to those of Raphael |
|---|---|
| Type | Bibliographic |
| Edition | |
| Year | 2020 |
| TOC | |
| Summary | "In June 2012, an early manuscript by renowned art historian Erwin Panofsky was discovered in a vault in a government building in Munich. The manuscript was quickly identified as Panofsky's habilitationsschrift on Michelangelo, a long-missing and legendary document that certified Panofsky to lead university courses, and about which scholars had speculated for decades. The manuscript's origins date back to late spring of 1920 (and was completed when its author was twenty-eight), but in 1933, Panofsky was forced to flee Nazi Germany without being able to go through his office or papers. The manuscript disappeared in the years leading up to World War II and was thought destroyed in the fire-bombing of Hamburg. Following his emigration to the United States in 1934, Panofsky joined the faculty of the newly-formed Institute for Advanced Study, and went on to author a dozen books, including three with Princeton University Press. |
| BH ID | BV046782318 |
| Link | |
| EPIC | |
| Open Data ID | BVB01-032191466 |
| Name | Panofsky, Erwin |
|---|---|
| Type | 100 |
| Year | 1892-1968 |
| Title | |
| Relationship | aut |
| Relator | Verfasser |
| GND | 118591568 : json |
| Wikidata | Q57656 |
| Name | Panofsky-Soergel, Gerda |
|---|---|
| Type | 700 |
| Year | 1929- |
| Title | |
| Relationship | edt |
| Relator | Herausgeber |
| GND | 11566212X : json |
| Wikidata | Q40988084 |
| Name | Spooner, Joseph |
|---|---|
| Type | 700 |
| Year | |
| Title | |
| Relationship | trl |
| Relator | Übersetzer |
| Wikidata |