Belvedere
0 sources
Belvedere
Summary
Belvedere is a lithograph print[1]. Belvedere draws 25 Wikipedia views per month (lithograph_print category, ranking #10 of 24).[2]
Key Facts
- Belvedere is the creator of M. C. Escher[3].
- Belvedere's instance of is recorded as lithograph print[4].
- belvedere is named after Belvedere[5].
- Belvedere's depicts is recorded as impossible object[6].
- Belvedere's depicts is recorded as building[7].
- Belvedere's depicts is recorded as column[8].
- Belvedere's depicts is recorded as roof[9].
- Belvedere's depicts is recorded as ladder[10].
- Belvedere's depicts is recorded as stairs[11].
- Belvedere's depicts is recorded as door[12].
- Belvedere's depicts is recorded as man[13].
- Belvedere's depicts is recorded as woman[14].
- Belvedere's depicts is recorded as prison[15].
- Belvedere's depicts is recorded as prisoner[16].
- Belvedere's depicts is recorded as impossible cube[17].
- Belvedere's depicts is recorded as Necker cube[18].
- Belvedere's depicts is recorded as bench[19].
- Belvedere's depicts is recorded as guard rail[20].
- Belvedere's depicts is recorded as ridge[21].
- Belvedere's depicts is recorded as Montagne del Morrone[22].
- Belvedere's depicts is recorded as belvedere[23].
- Belvedere's made from material is recorded as wove paper[24].
- Belvedere's collection is recorded as Israel Museum[25].
- Belvedere's collection is recorded as Art Institute of Chicago[26].
- Belvedere's inventory number is recorded as 1987.199.10[27].
Body
Works and Contributions
Belvedere is the creator of M. C. Escher[3].
Why It Matters
Belvedere draws 25 Wikipedia views per month (lithograph_print category, ranking #10 of 24).[2] Belvedere has Wikipedia articles in 8 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] Belvedere is known by 3 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]