Namepiece

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In art history, a namepiece is an artwork after which an otherwise unnamed artist is named. There is a long history of giving notnames to artists whose identity has been lost.

The Master of the Life of the Virgin (active c. 1463 to c. 1490) and the Master of the Legend of the Magdalen (active c. 1483 – c. 1527) both named after scenes from the Life of the Virgin attributed to them, the Master of the Prado Adoration of the Magi (active c. 1475 – 1500) named after his most famous panel, and the Vienna Master of Mary of Burgundy (c 1470 – c 1480), named after a manuscript owned by one of his patrons. [1] The Berlin Painter (active c. 490s-c. 460s BCE) was named by Sir John Beazley for a large lidded amphora in the Antikensammlung Berlin, the Berlin Painter's namepiece. [2] [3] Some more examples include:

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Notname Name given to an artist with no known name

In art history, a Notname is an invented name given to an artist whose identity has been lost. The practice arose from the need to give such artists and their typically untitled, or generically titled works, an acceptable if unsatisfactory grouping, avoiding confusion when cataloging. The phrases provisional name, name of convenience and emergency names are sometimes used to describe anonymous masters; nonce name was at one time used.

Master of the Legend of Saint Catherine

The Master of the Legend of Saint Catherine is the Notname for an unknown late 15th century Early Netherlandish painter. He was named after a painting with Scenes from the Legend of Saint Catherine, now kept in the Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium. He was active between c. 1470 and c. 1500, probably around Brussels.

Master of the Baroncelli Portraits

The Master of the Baroncelli Portraits is the notname for a fifteenth-century Early Netherlandish painter.

Master with the Parrot

The Master with the Parrot or Master of the Parrot is the notname given to a group of Flemish painters who likely worked in a workshop in Antwerp in the first half of the 16th century. They produced devotional pictures for the local bourgeoisie in a style reminiscent of contemporary Flemish painters working in an Italianate style.

Master of Mary of Burgundy Manuscript illuminator from the Southern Netherlands

The Master of Mary of Burgundy was a Flemish illuminator, painter and draughtsman active between 1469-1483 in Flanders, probably in Ghent. His notname is derived from two books of hours attributed to him, the Vienna Hours of Mary of Burgundy and another books of hours, now in Berlin, also for Mary of Burgundy.

Master of the Plump-Cheeked Madonnas

The Master of the Plump-Cheeked Madonnas is the notname given to a Flemish painter who likely worked in Bruges in the first quarter of the 16th century. He produced devotional pictures in a style reminiscent of contemporary painters working in Bruges such as Gerard David and Ambrosius Benson.

References

  1. "Vienna Master of Mary of Burgundy Archived 2013-01-24 at the Wayback Machine ". J. Paul Getty Museum. Retrieved July 13, 2013
  2. Perseus Project. Berlin F 2160.
  3. MOORE, MARY B. (1 January 2006). "SATYRS BY THE BERLIN PAINTER AND A NEW INTERPRETATION OF HIS NAMEPIECE". Antike Kunst. 49: 17–28. JSTOR   41321335.