Three books can be seen to the right of the celestial globe in the Linder Gallery. From the bottom they are the HARMONICES MUNDI or Harmonies of the World (1619) and the TABULAE RUDOLPHINAE or Rudolphine Tables (1627) … Read more »
Three books can be seen to the right of the celestial globe in the Linder Gallery. From the bottom they are the HARMONICES MUNDI or Harmonies of the World (1619) and the TABULAE RUDOLPHINAE or Rudolphine Tables (1627) … Read more »
The sole surviving piece of textual evidence that sheds light on the Linder gallery interior is a letter, sent on 28 March 1629, from the architect-engineer Giovanni Battista Caravaggio to his former tutor in mathematics, Mutio Oddi of … Read more »
The Royal Collection in Windsor Castle contains a drawing (RL 12983) showing the interior of a picture gallery that bears a striking resemblance to the Linder Gallery, showing a similar architectural space. There are some key differences though. … Read more »
There is no signature on the Linder Gallery, but on the red table on the right hand side of the painting is a small double-portrait. The portrait shows two men, a bearded man pointing at a drawing and … Read more »
I recently gave a rapidĀ introduction to the Linder Gallery at Dublin’s first IGNITE event at the Science Gallery. Speakers are limited to exactly 5 minutes, and 20 slides which auto-advance every 15 seconds, quite a challenge! View … Read more »
No matter where you are on the website, you can always access the version of the painting with commentary and rich zoom features by clicking the "show/hide painting" toggle above.
The conversation continues in A Mysterious Masterpiece. The World of the Linder Gallery, which contains an in-depth conversational study of the painting.
Order onlineAlexander Marr Anthony van Dyck Antwerp Antwerp Iconoclasm Belshazzar's Feast burning mirror Calvinism Cesare Ripa chronology cognoscenti connoisseurship Cornelis Drebbel Daniele Crespi David Hockney destruction Disegno Federico Barocci Giovanni Battista Caravaggio Hans Aachen Hieronymus Francken the Younger iconoclasm iconography Iconologia ignorance Johannes Kepler John Napier Kepler Lawrence Weschler Michael John Gorman Milan Muzio Oddi Paracelsus Patron perpetual motion perspective Peter Linder Peter Paul Rubens Pictura religion Ron Cordover Rudolphine Tables telescope Tycho Brahe Urbino Windsor drawing
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