Saint Barbara
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Saint Barbara
Summary
Saint Barbara is a drawing[1]. It draws 73 Wikipedia views per month (drawing category, ranking #18 of 46).[2]
Key Facts
- Saint Barbara is the creator of Jan van Eyck[3].
- Saint Barbara's religion is recorded as Christianity[4].
- Saint Barbara's instance of is recorded as drawing[5].
- Saint Barbara's instance of is recorded as painting[6].
- Saint Barbara is owned by Lucas de Heere[7].
- Saint Barbara is owned by Johannes Enschedé I[8].
- Saint Barbara is owned by Cornelis Ploos van Amstel[9].
- Saint Barbara is owned by Florent van Ertborn[10].
- Saint Barbara is associated with the Early Netherlandish painting movement[11].
- Saint Barbara's genre is religious art[12].
- Saint Barbara's depicts is recorded as Saint Barbara[13].
- Saint Barbara is made of oil paint[14].
- Saint Barbara is made of panel[15].
- Saint Barbara's collection is recorded as Royal Museum of Fine Arts Antwerp[16].
- Saint Barbara's collection is recorded as Vlaamse Kunstcollectie[17].
- Saint Barbara's inventory number is recorded as 410[18].
- Saint Barbara took place at Royal Museum of Fine Arts Antwerp[19].
- Saint Barbara is part of list of masterpieces of Flanders[20].
- Saint Barbara's Commons category is recorded as Saint Barbara by Jan van Eyck[21].
- Saint Barbara's catalog code is recorded as 11.1[22].
- Saint Barbara's catalog code is recorded as 26[23].
- January 1, 1437 marks the founding of Saint Barbara[24].
- Saint Barbara's exhibition history is recorded as Exposition des primitifs flamands à Bruges[25].
- Saint Barbara's exhibition history is recorded as Van Eyck. An Optical Revolution[26].
- Saint Barbara's main subject is Saint Barbara[27].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Saint Barbara is the creator of Jan van Eyck[3].
Publication
Saint Barbara's genre is religious art[12]. It is part of list of masterpieces of Flanders[20].
Subject and Themes
Saint Barbara's main subject is it[27]. It is associated with the Early Netherlandish painting movement[11].
Material and Period
Recorded made from material include oil paint[14] and panel[15]. The location of Saint Barbara was Royal Museum of Fine Arts Antwerp[19].
Why It Matters
Saint Barbara draws 73 Wikipedia views per month (drawing category, ranking #18 of 46).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 7 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28]