School of Fontainebleau
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School of Fontainebleau
Summary
School of Fontainebleau is an art movement[1]. It draws 229 Wikipedia views per month (art_movement category, ranking #141 of 334).[2]
Key Facts
- School of Fontainebleau's instance of is recorded as art movement[3].
- School of Fontainebleau's instance of is recorded as notname[4].
- School of Fontainebleau's instance of is recorded as group of humans[5].
- School of Fontainebleau's instance of is recorded as art group[6].
- School of Fontainebleau's genre is Mannerism[7].
- School of Fontainebleau took place at Fontainebleau[8].
- School of Fontainebleau's Commons category is recorded as École de Fontainebleau[9].
- School of Fontainebleau's country of origin is recorded as France[10].
- School of Fontainebleau's Commons Creator page is recorded as School of Fontainebleau[11].
- School of Fontainebleau's start of work period is recorded as 1530[12].
- School of Fontainebleau's end of work period is recorded as 1610[13].
- School of Fontainebleau's significant person is recorded as Rosso Fiorentino[14].
- School of Fontainebleau's significant person is recorded as Niccolò dell'Abbate[15].
- School of Fontainebleau's significant person is recorded as Francesco Primaticcio[16].
- School of Fontainebleau's significant person is recorded as Benvenuto Cellini[17].
- School of Fontainebleau's has works in the collection is recorded as Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen[18].
- School of Fontainebleau's has works in the collection is recorded as Bonnefanten Museum[19].
- School of Fontainebleau's has works in the collection is recorded as Uffizi Gallery[20].
- School of Fontainebleau's has works in the collection is recorded as Condé Museum[21].
- School of Fontainebleau's has works in the collection is recorded as Museum of Art and History Geneva[22].
- School of Fontainebleau's has works in the collection is recorded as Kunstmuseum Basel[23].
Why It Matters
School of Fontainebleau draws 229 Wikipedia views per month (art_movement category, ranking #141 of 334).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 19 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[24] It is known by 6 alternative names across languages and contexts.[25]