38:
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is and has been and now will someday become the sole object of fashionable care; the title of connoisseur in that art is at present the safest passport into every fashionable
Society; a well timed shrug, an admiring attitude and one or two exotic tones of exclamation are sufficient qualifications for
227:
Education offers an MA in the
History of Art and the Art Market that includes a seminar on connoisseurship. This covers "the critical skills needed to look at art, write about art, research and evaluate works, including handling and viewing art objects and visiting artists' studios, conservation labs
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wrote, "art connoisseurs say of art historians that they write about what they do not understand; art historians, on their side, disparage the connoisseurs, and only look upon them as the drudges who collect materials for them, but who personally have not the slightest knowledge of the physiology of
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says, "it is about noticing things which have specific characteristics of the artists involved, as opposed to general characteristics of the era". He points out the importance of condition and understanding what the artist originally painted (as opposed to how the painting now looks). His colleague,
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takes the view that connoisseurship is learned by looking at paintings and cannot be taught in the classroom. He believes that it has become unfashionable in the world of art history and as a result, activities such as producing a catalogue raisonné are undervalued by the art history establishment.
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The attributions of painted pottery were an important project to the
History of Ancient Art and Classical Archeology (Ancient Greece and South Italy). Two specialists were the most important authorities in archaeological connoisseurship:
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confirms the art historians reservations that the identification of individual style in works is "essentially assigned to a group of specialists in the field known as conoisseurs". Nonetheless,
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545:
130:"The ability to tell almost instinctively who painted a picture is defined ... as connoisseurship". Connoisseurs evaluate works of
106:, however, expert connoisseurship remains a crucial skill for the identification and attribution to individual artists of works by the
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37:
57:
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31:
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Art market and connoisseurship : a closer look at paintings by
Rembrandt, Rubens and their contemporaries
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During the 18th century, the term was often used as a synonym for a still vaguer man of taste or a pretend
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139:
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is essential, but it must be grounded in a thorough understanding of the work itself. On the basis of
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meaning 'to be acquainted with' or 'to know somebody/something') is a person who has a great deal of
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is similar, for example in assessing the potential for ageing in a young wine through
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98:. In many areas, the term now has an air of pretension, and may be used in a partly
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and many other products whose consumption can be pleasing to the senses.
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Oxford
Handbooks Online. Oxford University Press. Web. 10 May 2017.
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art historian, and the art historian as a loquacious connoisseur."
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Rembrandt, Reputation, and the
Practice of Connoisseurship
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and appraise quality. These findings are crucial for the
546:"Eighteenth-Century Connoisseurship and the Female Body"
528:(Fucecchio: European Press Academic Publishing, 2006).
535:
trans. Tancred
Borenius (London: B. Cassierer, 1942).
499:
Centre
National de Ressources Textuelles et Lexicales
447:, (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1987), 137-162,
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explains the difference between a connoisseur and an
541:(Montréal: Musée des beaux-arts de Montréal, 1978).
94:products; or who is an expert judge in matters of
539:L'art du connaisseur = The art of connoisseurship
526:From Duccio to Raphael: Connoisseurship in Crisis
367:
365:
558:Trummers, Anna, and Koenraad Jonckheere, eds.,
138:and technique of artists. Judgment informed by
562:(Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2008).
555:(Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2004).
110:and technique, where documentary evidence of
8:
173:, and can be collected and organized into a
61:
280:Connoisseur is also used in the context of
252:men of low circumstances to curry favour."
439:, "Style is What You Make It", p. 139, in
400:. Londonlovesbusiness.com. Archived from
202:: "The connoisseur might be defined as a
134:on the basis of their experience of the
361:
209:The English dealer and art historian,
7:
485:"Connaisseur" in its original French
114:is lacking. The situation in the
25:
461:"Christie's MA course components"
398:"Interview by Gabriella Griffith"
372:Grosvenor, Bendor (2010-12-08).
232:Earlier views of connoisseurship
45:", English School, 19th century.
463:. Christies.edu. Archived from
284:, i.e. in connection with fine
86:; who is a keen appreciator of
1:
276:Connoisseurs in other fields
32:Connoisseur (disambiguation)
533:On Art and Connoisseurship,
592:
192:Meaning in the Visual Arts
29:
337:, aficionado, enthusiast
179:of the work of a single
90:, fine wines, and other
60:, pre-1835, spelling of
74:
68:
551:Scallen, Catherine B.
497:"'Connaisseur' in the
422:Mould, Philip (2009).
126:Connoisseurship in art
62:
46:
531:Friedländer, Max J.,
266:John Davidson Beazley
66:, from Middle-French
40:
27:Subject-matter expert
544:Robinson, Terry F.,
441:The Concept of Style
374:"On Connoisseurship"
270:Arthur Dale Trendall
30:For other uses, see
378:Arthistorynews.com
176:catalogue raisonné
171:valuation of works
144:empirical evidence
47:
424:The Art Detective
16:(Redirected from
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524:Beck, James H.,
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268:(1885–1970) and
257:Giovanni Morelli
245:Oliver Goldsmith
216:Bendor Grosvenor
146:, refinement of
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43:Testing the Wine
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228:and museums."
196:Erwin Panofsky
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102:sense. In the
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505:. Retrieved
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469:. Retrieved
465:the original
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449:google books
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406:. Retrieved
402:the original
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381:. Retrieved
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316:, dilettante
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242:
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211:Philip Mould
208:
191:
189:
174:
167:authenticity
129:
120:wine tasting
50:
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18:Connoisseurs
576:Art history
165:, validate
63:connaisseur
58:traditional
51:connoisseur
507:2014-04-15
503:. Cnrtl.fr
471:2014-04-15
445:Berel Lang
426:. Penguin.
408:2014-04-15
383:2015-03-18
356:References
282:gastronomy
225:Christie's
163:authorship
148:perception
116:wine trade
112:provenance
82:about the
69:connoistre
350:Sommelier
325:Collector
320:Appraiser
255:In 1890,
243:In 1760,
160:attribute
152:technique
140:intuition
104:art trade
84:fine arts
80:knowledge
75:connaître
570:Category
345:gourmand
308:See also
249:Painting
194:(1955),
88:cuisines
341:Gourmet
314:Amateur
247:said, "
204:laconic
190:In his
92:gourmet
72:, then
443:, ed.
330:Expert
298:coffee
260:art."
238:critic
185:school
181:artist
150:about
100:ironic
55:French
183:or a
136:style
108:style
96:taste
294:wine
290:beer
286:food
156:form
154:and
335:Fan
302:tea
132:art
572::
376:.
364:^
343:,
300:,
296:,
292:,
288:,
240:.
187:.
122:.
49:A
510:.
474:.
411:.
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53:(
41:"
34:.
20:)
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