manuel cohen

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  • Doorway between the cloister and the abbey church, from former gallery, adorned with Seraphins, St Luke's Bull, St Mark's lion, and bestiary, 12th century Benedictine Abbey of Saint Michel de Cuxa, Codalet, Pyrenees Orientales, France.  Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC12_FRANCE_MC_047.jpg
  • Detail of wall painting (20th century copy), Lombard Romanesque style Church of Sant Joan de Boi, 11th century, Catalonia, Spain. On the undersides of arches and in the lower part of the church are murals representing the Medieval bestiary, a mix of known animals and fantastic beasts. The murals are now preserved at the National Museum of Catalan Art (MNAC) in Barcelona. Picture by Manuel Cohen.
    LCSPAIN11_MC069.jpg
  • Detail of wall painting of a dromedary (20th century copy), Lombard Romanesque style Church of Sant Joan de Boi, 11th century, Catalonia, Spain. On the undersides of arches and in the lower part of the church are murals representing the Medieval bestiary, a mix of known animals and fantastic beasts. The murals are now preserved at the National Museum of Catalan Art (MNAC) in Barcelona. Picture by Manuel Cohen.
    LCSPAIN11_MC060.jpg
  • Detail of wall painting (20th century copy),  of an Osne, Lombard Romanesque style Church of Sant Joan de Boi, 11th century, Catalonia, Spain.  On the undersides of arches and in the lower part of the church are murals representing the Medieval bestiary, a mix of known animals and fantastic beasts such as the Osne. The murals are now preserved at the National Museum of Catalan Art (MNAC) in Barcelona. Picture by Manuel Cohen.
    LCSPAIN11_MC058.jpg
  • Detail of wall painting (20th century copy),  Lombard Romanesque style Church of Sant Joan de Boi, 11th century, Catalonia, Spain. On the undersides of arches and in the lower part of the church are murals representing the Medieval bestiary, a mix of known animals and fantastic beasts. The murals are now preserved at the National Museum of Catalan Art (MNAC) in Barcelona. Picture by Manuel Cohen.
    LCSPAIN11_MC067.jpg
  • Detail of wall painting (20th century copy), showing a dromedary (right), a fantastic creature (left fragmented) and Saints (above), Lombard Romanesque style Church of Sant Joan de Boi, 11th century, Catalonia, Spain. On the undersides of arches and in the lower part of the church are murals representing the Medieval bestiary, a mix of known animals and fantastic beasts. The murals are now preserved at the National Museum of Catalan Art (MNAC) in Barcelona. Picture by Manuel Cohen.
    LCSPAIN11_MC059.jpg
  • Detail of wall painting (20th century copy), Lombard Romanesque style Church of Sant Joan de Boi, 11th century, Catalonia, Spain. On the undersides of arches and in the lower part of the church are murals representing the Medieval bestiary, a mix of known animals and fantastic beasts. The murals are now preserved at the National Museum of Catalan Art (MNAC) in Barcelona. Picture by Manuel Cohen.
    LCSPAIN11_MC068.jpg
  • Detail of wall painting (20th century copy),  Lombard Romanesque style Church of Sant Joan de Boi, 11th century, Catalonia, Spain. On the undersides of arches and in the lower part of the church are murals representing the Medieval bestiary, a mix of known animals and fantastic beasts. The murals are now preserved at the National Museum of Catalan Art (MNAC) in Barcelona. Picture by Manuel Cohen.
    LCSPAIN11_MC057.jpg
  • Detail of wall painting (20th century copy) of a Carcoliti, Lombard Romanesque style Church of Sant Joan de Boi, 11th century, Catalonia, Spain. On the undersides of arches and in the lower part of the church are murals representing the Medieval bestiary, a mix of known animals and fantastic beasts such as this Carcoliti. The murals are now preserved at the National Museum of Catalan Art (MNAC) in Barcelona. Picture by Manuel Cohen.
    LCSPAIN11_MC056.jpg
  • Detail of wall painting (20th century copy),  Lombard Romanesque style Church of Sant Joan de Boi, 11th century, Catalonia, Spain. On the undersides of arches and in the lower part of the church are murals representing the Medieval bestiary, a mix of known animals and fantastic beasts. The murals are now preserved at the National Museum of Catalan Art (MNAC) in Barcelona. Picture by Manuel Cohen.
    LCSPAIN11_MC061.jpg
  • Fantastical animals, 12th century Romanesque cloister of the Benedictine Abbey of Saint Michel de Cuxa, Codalet, Pyrenees Orientales, France.  Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC12_FRANCE_MC_009.jpg
  • Fantastical animals, 12th century Romanesque cloister of the Benedictine Abbey of Saint Michel de Cuxa, Codalet, Pyrenees Orientales, France.  Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC12_FRANCE_MC_016.jpg
  • Fantastical animals, 12th century Romanesque cloister of the Benedictine Abbey of Saint Michel de Cuxa, Codalet, Pyrenees Orientales, France.  Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC12_FRANCE_MC_013.jpg
  • Figure amid fantastical animals, 12th century Romanesque cloister of the Benedictine Abbey of Saint Michel de Cuxa, Codalet, Pyrenees Orientales, France.  Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC12_FRANCE_MC_002.jpg
  • Figure amid fantastical animals, 12th century Romanesque cloister of the Benedictine Abbey of Saint Michel de Cuxa, Codalet, Pyrenees Orientales, France.  Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC12_FRANCE_MC_028.jpg
  • Figure amid fantastical animals, 12th century Romanesque cloister of the Benedictine Abbey of Saint Michel de Cuxa, Codalet, Pyrenees Orientales, France.  Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC12_FRANCE_MC_007.jpg
  • Figure amid fantastical animals, 12th century Romanesque cloister of the Benedictine Abbey of Saint Michel de Cuxa, Codalet, Pyrenees Orientales, France.  Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC12_FRANCE_MC_001.jpg
  • Figure amid fantastical animals, 12th century Romanesque cloister of the Benedictine Abbey of Saint Michel de Cuxa, Codalet, Pyrenees Orientales, France.  Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC12_FRANCE_MC_003.jpg
  • Fantastical animals, 12th century Romanesque cloister of the Benedictine Abbey of Saint Michel de Cuxa, Codalet, Pyrenees Orientales, France.  Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC12_FRANCE_MC_011.jpg
  • Fantastical animals, 12th century Romanesque cloister of the Benedictine Abbey of Saint Michel de Cuxa, Codalet, Pyrenees Orientales, France.  Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC12_FRANCE_MC_012.jpg
  • St Mark's lion and Seraphin, carved detail of the doorway between the cloister and the abbey church, from former gallery, 12th century Benedictine Abbey of Saint Michel de Cuxa, Codalet, Pyrenees Orientales, France.  Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC12_FRANCE_MC_032.jpg
  • Figure amid fantastical animals, 12th century Romanesque cloister of the Benedictine Abbey of Saint Michel de Cuxa, Codalet, Pyrenees Orientales, France.  Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC12_FRANCE_MC_038.jpg
  • Fantastical animals, 12th century Romanesque cloister of the Benedictine Abbey of Saint Michel de Cuxa, Codalet, Pyrenees Orientales, France.  Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC12_FRANCE_MC_015.jpg
  • St Luke's Bull, carved detail of the doorway between the cloister and the abbey church, from former gallery, 12th century Benedictine Abbey of Saint Michel de Cuxa, Codalet, Pyrenees Orientales, France.  Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC12_FRANCE_MC_034.jpg
  • Figure amid fantastical animals, 12th century Romanesque cloister of the Benedictine Abbey of Saint Michel de Cuxa, Codalet, Pyrenees Orientales, France.  Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC12_FRANCE_MC_005.jpg
  • Figure amid fantastical animals, 12th century Romanesque cloister of the Benedictine Abbey of Saint Michel de Cuxa, Codalet, Pyrenees Orientales, France.  Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC12_FRANCE_MC_008.jpg
  • Figure amid fantastical animals, 12th century Romanesque cloister of the Benedictine Abbey of Saint Michel de Cuxa, Codalet, Pyrenees Orientales, France.  Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC12_FRANCE_MC_010.jpg
  • St Mark's lion, carved detail of the doorway between the cloister and the abbey church, from former gallery, 12th century Benedictine Abbey of Saint Michel de Cuxa, Codalet, Pyrenees Orientales, France.  Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC12_FRANCE_MC_035.jpg
  • St Luke's Bull and Seraphin, carved detail of the doorway between the cloister and the abbey church, from former gallery, 12th century Benedictine Abbey of Saint Michel de Cuxa, Codalet, Pyrenees Orientales, France.  Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC12_FRANCE_MC_031.jpg
  • Figure amid fantastical animals, 12th century Romanesque cloister of the Benedictine Abbey of Saint Michel de Cuxa, Codalet, Pyrenees Orientales, France.  Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC12_FRANCE_MC_006.jpg
  • Figure amid fantastical animals, 12th century Romanesque cloister of the Benedictine Abbey of Saint Michel de Cuxa, Codalet, Pyrenees Orientales, France.  Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC12_FRANCE_MC_036.jpg
  • Fantastical animals, 12th century Romanesque cloister of the Benedictine Abbey of Saint Michel de Cuxa, Codalet, Pyrenees Orientales, France.  Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC12_FRANCE_MC_014.jpg
  • Low angle view of nave showing wall paintings of bestiary (20th century copies),  Lombard Romanesque style Church of Sant Joan de Boi, 11th century, Catalonia, Spain. On the undersides of arches and in the lower part of the church are murals representing the Medieval bestiary, a mix of known animals and fantastic beasts. The murals are now preserved at the National Museum of Catalan Art (MNAC) in Barcelona. Picture by Manuel Cohen.
    LCSPAIN11_MC062.jpg
  • General view of Sant Joan de Boi church, 1123, consecrated by Ramon Guillem, the bishop of Roda, Taull, Province of Lleida, Catalonia, Spain. It is a basilica with three naves with a central wooden gable roof apse and two small semi-circular apses. Mural paintings decorate the interior of the naves with scenes such as The Stoning of Saint Stephen, The Minstrels and The Bestiary. All paintings were taken to the MNAC (National Art Museum of Catalonia, Barcelona) in 1922. The church is one of the best examples of Romanesque architecture. Sant Joan de Boi church is part of the Catalan Romanesque churches of the Vall de Boí which were declared a World Heritage Site by UNESCO in November 2000. Picture by Manuel Cohen.
    LCSPAIN11_MC054.jpg
  • General view of Sant Joan de Boi church, 1123, consecrated by Ramon Guillem, the bishop of Roda, Taull, Province of Lleida, Catalonia, Spain. It is a basilica with three naves with a central wooden gable roof apse and two small semi-circular apses. Mural paintings decorate the interior of the naves with scenes such as The Stoning of Saint Stephen, The Minstrels and The Bestiary. All paintings were taken to the MNAC (National Art Museum of Catalonia, Barcelona) in 1922. The church is one of the best examples of Romanesque architecture. Sant Joan de Boi church is part of the Catalan Romanesque churches of the Vall de Boí which were declared a World Heritage Site by UNESCO in November 2000. Picture by Manuel Cohen.
    LCSPAIN11_MC053.jpg
  • Sculpted Romanesque stone capital, 12th century, with mermaid, fish and birds, from the San Pedro Church, in the Museu Nacional de Machado de Castro, Coimbra, Portugal. Inspired by Oriental bestiaries, this capital symbolises the protective and benevolent aspect of the sea. The museum was opened in 1913 and renovated 2004-2012. The city of Coimbra dates back to Roman times and was the capital of Portugal from 1131 to 1255. Its historic buildings are listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_PORTUGAL_MC_208.jpg
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