National Repository of Grey Literature 3 records found  Search took 0.00 seconds. 
Paintings by Anton Stevens from the Martinic chapel in the St. Vitus cathedral
Tibitanzlová, Radka ; Vácha, Štěpán
The article is focused on the iconography of paintings by Anton Stevens von Steinfels painted for the funeral chapel of the Martinic family in the St. Vitus cathedral.
Mathey delineavit. The tombstone of Count Humprecht Jan Černín of Chudenice in light of the written sources (1683–1688)
Vácha, Štěpán
The tombstone of Count Humprecht Jan Černín in the chapel of St Sigismund in the cathedral of St Vitus is one of the unjustly forgotten sepulchral monument of the 17th century in Bohemia. Based on so-far unpublished correspondence from 1683 until 1688, it is possible not only to document the complicated course of the building of this monument but also to determine the designer of the monument who is the prominent architect active in Bohemia in the 1670s-90s Jean Baptiste Mathey. Some hitherto unknown Mathey´s works are newly published here – the altar retables in Stará Boleslav (Altbunzlau) and in Litvínov (Leutensdorf), also the graphic portrait of the prioress of the Discalced Carmelites in Prague´s Malá Strana the venerable Maria Electa à Jesu.
The Prague painter Anton Stevens of Steinfels in the services of Prince Gundaker von Liechtenstein
Vácha, Štěpán
The detailed analysis of historical sources and archival text from the Family Archive of the Liechtenstein princes in Vienna allows us to identify the Prague painter Anton Stevens of Steinfels (around 1610–1675) with a so-far unidentified painter whom Prince Gundaker von Liechtenstein tried to employ in 1640. In connection with this identification, the author attempts to identify the authorship of one of Gundaker´s portraits found in the family collection of the Liechtenstein princes.

Interested in being notified about new results for this query?
Subscribe to the RSS feed.