Třeboň Altarpiece
14th century altarpiece / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Třeboň Altarpiece, also known as Wittingau altarpiece, is one of the most important works of European Gothic panel painting.[1] Of the original large altarpiece retable created in about 1380 by an anonymous Gothic painter called the Master of the Třeboň Altarpiece, three wings, painted on both sides, have survived. The altarpiece is one of the works that helped towards the emergence of the International Gothic style (called the Beautiful Style in the Bohemian lands) and which influenced the development of art in a broad European context.[2][3]
It was created for the Augustinian Church of St Giles in Třeboň and is now part of the permanent collection of medieval art of the National Gallery in Prague.