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Pinxit
(from Latin: "one painted") is a stylized amendment added to the signature depiction of the name of the person responsible for a work of art, found conventionally in the Late Middle Ages and the Renaissance. It is sometimes abbreviated P, PIN, or PINX, as in some paintings by Raphael. The locution ''me pinxit'' is found on a 12th-century crucifix, not in a sense connected to individual authorship but rather as a more impersonal devotional statement, a "pious () appropriate for liturgical gifts". Its use by Duccio (c. 1255-1260 – c. 1318-1319) on the ''Maestà'' in Siena Cathedral is seen as an "audacious" claim by the author, who asserts an individual status on a par with that of the city. By the Late Middle Ages in Venice and elsewhere ''pinxit'' (or other forms of ''pingere'', in Gothic lettering) had become customary, and was often found on a ''cartellino'', "any form of fictive paper carrying an inscription", established in Venice by the 1440s. Other verbs used to establish authorship include conjugations of ''facere'' ("to make"; ''fecit'' ("made by") was frequently used by Titian) or ''fingere'' ("to conceive"). ==Latin== ''Pinxit'' is the third-person singular perfect active indicative of pingō, with the meanings: I decorate or embellish; I paint, tint or colour; I portray.
抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Pinxit」の詳細全文を読む
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