Aragonese school of painting

E296048

The Aragonese school of painting is a regional artistic tradition from Aragon in northeastern Spain, characterized by a blend of Gothic, Renaissance, and later Baroque influences and known for its religious imagery and altarpieces.

All labels observed (2)

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (38)

Predicate Object
instanceOf artistic tradition
school of painting
artForm painting
associatedWith Catholic Church in Spain
Kingdom of Aragon
characteristic blend of Gothic and Renaissance elements
detailed narrative scenes
emphasis on religious imagery
later Baroque influences
use of polychromy in altarpieces
country Spain
culturalContext Aragonese culture
developedIn Baroque period
Renaissance period
late Middle Ages
genre religious art
influencedBy Flemish painting
Gothic painting
Italian Renaissance painting
Spanish Baroque painting
languageContext Aragonese language
surface form: Aragonese language area

Spanish language area
locatedIn Aragon
movement Baroque
surface form: Baroque art

Gothic art
Italian Renaissance painting
surface form: Renaissance art
notableWorkType altarpiece
panel painting
partOf Spanish art history
region northeastern Spain
traditionType regional artistic tradition
typicalSubject Jesus Christ
surface form: Christ

Christian iconography
Virgin Mary
biblical scenes
saints
usedIn church decoration
monastic decoration

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (2)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

José Luzán artisticSchool Aragonese school of painting
frescoes in the Charterhouse of Aula Dei associatedWith Aragonese school of painting
this entity surface form: Zaragoza school of painting