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001 $ 05/874
003 $ UK-LoRAA
041 0 # $a eng
044 # # $a uk
245 0 0 $a Arena Chapel, Padua: a series of wood engravings from the frescoes of Giotto, illustrating the lives of the Virgin and our Saviour.
260 # # $a [London:] $b Arundel Society, $c 1860.
300 # # $a [2] f., 38 pl.; $c 569 mm.
508 # # $a All plates are signed as painted by Giotto, drawn by W.O. Williams and made by Dalziel fratres.

Each carries the publisher's imprint of the Arundel Society (with date).
510 0 # $a R. Cooper, 'The popularisation of Renaissance art in Victorian England', in Art history, I (1978), p.263-92; T. Harrod, A study of the Arundel Society 1848-1897 [dissertation, Univy. Oxford] (1978); C. H. Lloyd, Art and its images [exhibition catalogue] (1975), p.124-7; W. Noel Johnson, A handbook to the collection of chromolithographs from copies of important works of ancient masters published by the Arundel Society (1907); V. Marchese, 'La Società Arundel in Londra e le belle arti in Italia', in Ultimi scritti (1889), p.213; M. Digby Wyatt, An address in the Crystal palace on November 3rd 1855 at the opening of an exhibition of works of art belonging to the Arundel Society (1855).
520 2 # $a These prints were accompanied by a text by John Ruskin, Giotto And His Works In Padua: Being An Explanatory Notice of the Series of Woodcuts Executed for the Arundel Society After the Frescoes in the Arena Chapel ([London:] Printed for the Arundel Society, 1854).

Plates 1-14 carry the date 1853; 15-23, 1854; 14-26, 1855; 27-28, 1856.

They show paintings executed by Giotto in the Cappella degli Scrovegni at Padua about 1305; which depict the lives of the Virgin and of Christ.

W. O. Williams's watercolours after the frescoes were exhibited at the Crystal Palace, London, in 1855-6, where they were praised by Rossetti. On the need for faithfulness in copying Ruskin comments, 'Copyists try to modify or to hide the weaknesses of the old art ... by which procedure they very often wholly lose its spirit, and only half redeem its defects'. He also addresses the perennial question of whether one method of reproduction may be more appropriate than another in attempting to convey the style of the original: Giotto, he suggests, 'never finished highly ... in his fresco work the handling is much broader than that of contemporary painters ... For this reason the character of his painting is best expressed by bold wood-engravings'.
562 # # $a Copy 1: Imperfect; wanting the first two leaves, and pl. 29-38. On the upper cover is pasted a white paper label inscribed in ink in an unknown hand, 'Giotto's Chapel at Padua Press 1 Shelf 1'. Copy 2: Imperfect; wanting pl.1-26.
563 # # $a Copy 1: 19th-century quarter morocco, blue cloth-covered boards; spine lettered 'Giotto's Chapel'. Copy 2: Unbound (as issued).
600 0 4 $a Giotto
600 0 4 $a Jesus Christ
600 0 4 $a Mary
630 # # $a Bible $p N.T. $p Gospels
653 # # $a Christian art and symbolism - Saints
653 # # $a Paintings, Italian - Frescoes - Narrative art - Church decoration and ornament - Churches - Chapels - Italy - Padua - Cappella degli Scrovegni nell'Arena - History - 14th century
655 # 0 $a Pictorial works - Wood-engravings - Great Britain - 19th century
700 0 # $a Giotto $e source artist
700 1 # $a Williams $e draughtsman
710 2 # $a Arundel Society $e publisher
710 2 # $a Dalziel Brothers (London) $e engraver