Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Stained_glass> ?p ?o }
- Stained_glass abstract "The term stained glass can refer to coloured glass as a material or to works created from it. Throughout its thousand-year history, the term has been applied almost exclusively to the windows of churches, mosques and other significant buildings. Although traditionally made in flat panels and used as windows, the creations of modern stained glass artists also include three-dimensional structures and sculpture.Modern vernacular usage has often extended the term \"stained glass\" to include domestic leadlight and objets d'art created from came glasswork exemplified in the famous lamps of Louis Comfort Tiffany.As a material stained glass is glass that has been coloured by adding metallic salts during its manufacture. The coloured glass is crafted into stained glass windows in which small pieces of glass are arranged to form patterns or pictures, held together (traditionally) by strips of lead and supported by a rigid frame. Painted details and yellow stain are often used to enhance the design. The term stained glass is also applied to windows in which the colours have been painted onto the glass and then fused to the glass in a kiln.Stained glass, as an art and a craft, requires the artistic skill to conceive an appropriate and workable design, and the engineering skills to assemble the piece. A window must fit snugly into the space for which it is made, must resist wind and rain, and also, especially in the larger windows, must support its own weight. Many large windows have withstood the test of time and remained substantially intact since the late Middle Ages. In Western Europe they constitute the major form of pictorial art to have survived. In this context, the purpose of a stained glass window is not to allow those within a building to see the world outside or even primarily to admit light but rather to control it. For this reason stained glass windows have been described as 'illuminated wall decorations'.The design of a window may be abstract or figurative; may incorporate narratives drawn from the Bible, history, or literature; may represent saints or patrons, or use symbolic motifs, in particular armorial. Windows within a building may be thematic, for example: within a church - episodes from the life of Christ; within a parliament building - shields of the constituencies; within a college hall - figures representing the arts and sciences; or within a home - flora, fauna, or landscape.Stained glass is still popular today, but often referred to as art glass. It is prevalent in luxury homes, commercial buildings, and places of worship. Artists and companies are contracted to create beautiful art glass ranging from domes, windows, backsplashes, etc.".
- Stained_glass thumbnail Chartres_-_cathédrale_-_rosace_nord.jpg?width=300.
- Stained_glass wikiPageExternalLink www.stainedglasscanada.ca.
- Stained_glass wikiPageExternalLink stained-glass.
- Stained_glass wikiPageExternalLink 66508.
- Stained_glass wikiPageExternalLink stained-glass-radiant-art-978-1606061534.
- Stained_glass wikiPageExternalLink brief33.htm.
- Stained_glass wikiPageExternalLink www.bucksstainedglass.org.uk.
- Stained_glass wikiPageExternalLink www.gloine.ie.
- Stained_glass wikiPageExternalLink www.mayer-of-munich.com.
- Stained_glass wikiPageExternalLink SGAAhistorySG.htm.
- Stained_glass wikiPageExternalLink www.stainedglassmuseum.com.
- Stained_glass wikiPageExternalLink home.asp.
- Stained_glass wikiPageExternalLink home.asp?NOC=NOC.
- Stained_glass wikiPageExternalLink 126036027.
- Stained_glass wikiPageExternalLink stained-glass.
- Stained_glass wikiPageID "142340".
- Stained_glass wikiPageLength "62250".
- Stained_glass wikiPageOutDegree "404".
- Stained_glass wikiPageRevisionID "707049591".
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Abstract_art.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Abstract_expressionism.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Adam_and_Eve.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Agate.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Al-Raqqah.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Albrecht_Dürer.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Alchemy_and_chemistry_in_medieval_Islam.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Aleppo.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Alfred_Drury_(stained_glass_artist).
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Alphonse_Mucha.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink An_Túr_Gloine.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Ancient_Egypt.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Ancient_Rome.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Andrea_del_Castagno.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Angel_gilding.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Annealing_(glass).
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Antimony_trioxide.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Antioch.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Architectural_glass.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Architecture_of_cathedrals_and_great_churches.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Arnold_of_Nijmegen.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Arsenic_trioxide.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Art.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Art_Nouveau.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Assumption_of_Mary.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Augsburg.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Augustus_Pugin.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Austria-Hungary.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Austrian_Empire.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Autonomous_Stained_Glass.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Aveyron.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Bald_eagle.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Baldwin_II,_Latin_Emperor.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Basilica_of_St._Urbain,_Troyes.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Beauvais.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Belgium.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Belle_Epoch.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Benedict_Biscop.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Berlin.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Beveled_glass.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Bible.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Black.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Borosilicate_glass.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Brian_Clarke_(artist).
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink British_Museum.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink British_and_Irish_stained_glass_(1811–1918).
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Brooklyn_Museum.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Brown.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Brown_Memorial_Presbyterian_Church.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Buckfast_Abbey.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Cadmium.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Caen.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Calcium.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Came.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Came_glasswork.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Canterbury.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Canterbury_Cathedral.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Carbon.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Carcinogen.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Carl_Geylings_Erben.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Cassagnes-Bégonhès.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Castle_Bodenstein.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Category:Glass_architecture.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Category:Glass_production.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Category:History_of_glass.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Category:Stained_glass.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Category:Windows.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Cathedral.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Cathedral_glass.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Centrifugal_force.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Charles_Eamer_Kempe.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Charles_Rennie_Mackintosh.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Chartres.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Chartres_Cathedral.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Chromium.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Church_of_Saint_Maurice_(Olomouc).
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Châlons-en-Champagne.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Clayton_and_Bell.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Cologne_Cathedral.
- Stained_glass wikiPageWikiLink Concrete.