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Festival of the Archers
Master of Frankfurt·1493
Historical Context
The Master of Frankfurt, an anonymous painter identified by a group of stylistically related works, created this piece around 1493, now in Antwerp's Royal Museum of Fine Arts. This work exemplifies the High Renaissance artistic production of the period, when numerous skilled painters whose names have been lost worked alongside better-documented masters. This work belongs to the High Renaissance, when the innovations of the preceding century were synthesized into works of monumental clarity and ideal beauty. The period's defining aesthetic — balanced composition, idealized figures, unified atmospheric space — was developed above all in Florence and Rome before spreading across Italy and Europe.
Technical Analysis
The work exemplifies the Netherlandish tradition of precise descriptive painting, with meticulous attention to the textures of fabrics, architectural surfaces, and the subtle effects of natural light.



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