Sign up for our news and updates and get free domestic standard shipping on your orders.

Sign up for our news and updates and get free domestic standard shipping on your orders.

Subscribe Now

This section doesn’t currently include any content. Add content to this section using the sidebar.

Image caption appears here

Add your deal, information or promotional text

Polychrome Sculpture: Meaning, Form, Conservation

Johannes Taubert
Edited with a new introduction
by Michele D. Marincola

In the decades since its initial publication in German in 1978, Polychrome Sculpture has come to be widely regarded as a watershed text on the making and meaning of European medieval and Baroque painted wood sculpture. An early proponent of interdisciplinary research, Johannes Taubert played a pioneering role in combining the rigorous scientific analysis of materials with a fuller understanding of form and function, an approach that has led to the development of technical art history as practiced today.

Many of the essays in this volume apply such scientific techniques as microscopic analysis to an art-historical understanding of Romanesque and late Gothic wood sculpture, revealing that, far from serving a merely decorative function, the painted surface of these works was intricately connected to their meaning. The paint layers on the sculptures, for example, which the author spent years documenting through close examination and analysis, were intended to impart a heightened sense of reality to the life-sized sculptures, thereby enhancing the viewer’s experience of worship. Taubert believed it was crucial for conservators to understand this context before undertaking any treatments. No other book offers such a focused, subtle, and interdisciplinary examination of the subject as Polychrome Sculpture.

This influential work is now available in English for the first time, in a meticulous translation enhanced and updated by new color illustrations, annotations to the original text, and a new introduction.

Johannes Taubert (1922–1975), a prominent art historian and conservator, was head of the Bayerisches Landesamt für Denkmalpflege (Bavarian State Department for the Preservation of Monuments). Michele D. Marincola is Sherman Fairchild Distinguished Professor of Conservation at the Conservation Center of the Institute of Fine Arts, New York University, and the conservator at The Cloisters, Metropolitan Museum of Art.

“Highly important.”
—Elisabeth Sobieczky, Speculum

“This important new translation . . . enables the English-speaking world to access a core text on polychrome sculpture for the first time from a body of literature which to this day remains largely in German.”
ICON: The Institute of Conservation, Sept 2017

 “Throughout the book, Marincola has added extremely useful references from conservators and technical art historians, bringing the volume up-to-date. . . . Marincola and The Getty Conservation Institute are to be congratulated for this initiative and this very handsome volume that will be useful not only for wood sculpture conservators, but also for all historians of medieval art and well beyond.”
Medieval Review

 

216 pages
8 1/8 x 10 1/4 inches
240 color illustrations
ISBN 978-1-60606-433-7
hardcover

Getty Publications
Imprint: Getty Conservation Institute

2015

 

 

Search