Cambridge Studies in the History of Art

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Cambridge Studies in the History of Art is a book series of the history of art published by Cambridge University Press. The editors were Francis Haskell, a fellow of King's College, Cambridge, and Nicholas Penny of the National Gallery.[1] The first volume in the series was El Greco and his patrons: Three major projects by Richard G. Mann, published in 1986, in which Mann investigated three of El Greco's six major projects and the patrons responsible for them.[2]

Volumes

1980s

  • El Greco and his patrons: Three major projects, Richard G. Mann, 1986.
  • A bibliography of salon criticism in Second Empire Paris, Christopher Parsons & Martha Ward (compilers), 1986.
  • Giotto and the language of gesture,
  • Power and display in the seventeenth century: The arts and their patrons in Modena and Ferrara, Janet Southorn, 1988.

1990s

References

  1. ^ Cambridge Studies in the History of Art. Cambridge University Press. Retrieved 17 December 2016.
  2. Renaissance Quarterly
    , Vol. 40, No. 3 (Autumn, 1987), pp. 538-540.