https://bridwell.omeka.net/items/browse?advanced%5B0%5D%5Belement_id%5D=39&advanced%5B0%5D%5Btype%5D=is+exactly&advanced%5B0%5D%5Bterms%5D=Koberger%2C+Anton%2C+approximately+1440%E2%80%931513+printer.&sort_field=added&sort_dir=a&output=atom2024-03-28T05:54:07-04:00Omekahttps://bridwell.omeka.net/items/show/811The majority of the 109 woodcuts used in this Nuremberg edition of the German Bible of 1483 originally were produced in Cologne for Heinrich Quentell's Low German Bible of c. 1478. The woodcuts were hand colored.]]>2022-11-26T12:54:13-05:00
]]>https://bridwell.omeka.net/items/show/1023Four horsemen of the apocalypse pictured together as typical of 15th century German art. The illustrations are hand-colored wood engravings.]]>2022-11-26T12:54:16-05:00
]]>https://bridwell.omeka.net/items/show/1024The majority of the 109 woodcuts used in this Nuremberg edition of the German Bible of 1483 originally were produced in Cologne for Heinrich Quentell's Low German Bible of c. 1478. The woodcuts were hand colored.]]>2022-11-26T12:54:16-05:00
]]>https://bridwell.omeka.net/items/show/1321Latin Bible featuring fifteenth-century binding of blind-stamped calfskin. The binding is thought to be done at a bindery in Brixen, in the Alps of South Tyrol (Italy).]]>2022-11-26T12:54:20-05:00
]]>https://bridwell.omeka.net/items/show/1883Dürer’s godfather, Anton Koberger (c. 1445–1513) created the most important illustrated book produced in Nuremberg during Dürer’s youth, this two-volume German Bible. The woodcuts used in this book originally were produced in Cologne for Heinrich Quentell’s German Bible, published c. 1478. Purchased for re-use by Koberger in Nuremberg, these woodblocks contributed much to Dürer’s artistic vocabulary.]]>2022-11-26T12:54:28-05:00