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Showing posts with label Illuminated books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Illuminated books. Show all posts

Monday, June 3, 2013

Sharing the illuminated Book of Hours or Black Hours



I´ve followed the link via Projectgutenberg.org and couldn´t wait to share this marvelous book.
From the Morgan Library web page:

This Book of Hours, referred to as the Black Hours, is one of a small handful of manuscripts written and illuminated on vellum that is stained or painted black. The result is quite arresting. The text is written in silver and gold, with gilt initials and line endings composed of chartreuse panels enlivened with yellow filigree. Gold foliage on a monochromatic blue background makes up the borders. The miniatures are executed in a restricted palette of blue, old rose, and light flesh tones, with dashes of green, gray, and white. The solid black background is utilized to great advantage, especially by means of gold highlighting.

The anonymous painter of the Black Hours is an artist whose style depended mainly upon that of Willem Vrelant, one of the dominant illuminators working in Bruges from the late 1450s until his death in 1481. As in the work of Vrelant, figures in angular drapery move somewhat stiffly in shallowly defined spaces. The men's flat faces are dominated by large noses.

Although, in general, well preserved, this manuscript has some condition problems. The black of its vellum—the very thing that makes the codex so striking—is also the cause of some serious flaking. The carbon used in the black renders the surface of the vellum smooth and shiny—a handsome but less than ideal supporting surface for some of the pigments. The Morgan's Black Hours is awaiting conservation treatment. In the meantime, we are pleased to offer a virtual facsimile.

"Black Hours," for Rome use. Belgium, Bruges, c. 1470 (MS M.493).


Friday, March 1, 2013

The beauty of illuminated letters

One of my favorite trips is to visit the Getty museums, either the Getty Center or the Getty Villa. A few years ago, I was allowed to take pictures of the illuminated manuscripts they had on exhibition, and currently, they have another one.
From the newsletter, I´m sharing the explanation about two letters and the repurposing of one of them:

Initial I: A Martyr Saint, cutting from an antiphonal, Lippo Vanni, about 1350-75

For hundreds of years, medieval manuscripts have been bought and sold, gifted and stolen, preserved and rearranged, loved and forgotten, hidden and displayed. They were cut into pieces, hung on walls, and glued into albums. They have survived wars, fires, floods, religious conflict, political tumult, the invention of printing, and changes in taste.

At times valued for their beauty, for their spiritual significance, or simply for the strength of their parchment pages, the books, leaves, and cuttings in this exhibition have been transformed again and again to suit the changing expectations of their various audiences and owners. By revealing the ways in which manuscripts have been repurposed both conceptually and physically, this exhibition explores their long and eventful history since the Middle Ages.

In this image, a male figure forms the letter I. His exact identity is unknown, but the presence of multiple instruments of torture identify him as a martyr. Notice the two large stones on his head, a sword through his neck, and a grill and fire at his feet. It was a common practice in the 19th century for collectors to trim away all traces of surrounding text in illuminated manuscripts, as here. Collectors mounted such cuttings into albums, allowing the viewer to concentrate solely on the imagery. - 
See more at:
 http://www.getty.edu/art/exhibitions/untold_stories/?utm_source=egetty137&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=egetty137#sthash.Z0ZXX01a.dpuf


The Ascension of Christ, Lorenzo Monaco, designer; completed by Zanobi di Benedetto Strozzi, illuminator; and Battista di Biagio Sanguini, illuminator, Italian, Florence, designed about 1410; completed about 1431

As centuries passed, medieval manuscripts were sometimes refashioned to serve a different purpose. Cut from books whose liturgical or devotional use might have become outmoded, pictures were presented in a new format to fulfill a more current function. In the 19th century, collectors hung illuminated initials on the walls. These were no longer presented as letter forms beginning a word, but were instead valued for their aesthetic qualities.

At the center of this initial V, the apostles watch in wonder as Christ rises to heaven after his resurrection. The image was removed from a large choir book made for the Florentine monastery of Santa Maria degli Angeli, where the leaf's designer, Lorenzo Monaco, was also a monk. - 
See more at:
 http://www.getty.edu/art/exhibitions/untold_stories/?utm_source=egetty137&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=egetty137#sthash.Z0ZXX01a.dpuf

Sunday, February 3, 2013

El Vaticano pone sus manuscritos en la web

Trabajo de restauración, 2007

Eruditos y esforzados medievalistas de todo el mundo, que peregrinaban a Roma para poder estudiar los antiguos códices, cartas y manuscritos encerrados en la Biblioteca de los Papas tendrán ahora, al alcance de un clic, los documentos a los que antes tanto les había costado acceder. Y no solo ellos. Cualquier persona que se inscriba en el sitio de la Biblioteca Apostólica Vaticana, www.vaticanlibrary.va puede consultar libremente en internet uno de los más preciosos patrimonios libreros del mundo. El proyecto de digitalización de documentos ya puso en red los primeros 256 documentos aunque su objetivo es más ambicioso: “Abarcará los 80.000 manuscritos en los depósitos”, dijo recientemente monseñor Cesare Pasini, prefecto de la Biblioteca Vaticana, quien anunció que los archivos ocuparán un total de 4,5 millones de gigas.
El proyecto, que llevará varios años, comenzó a fines de 2011 y prevé el uso de tecnologías de la NASA para digitalizar los documentos. “Muchos de los manuscritos que ya están on line proceden de la Biblioteca de Heidelberg, por un acuerdo con la Biblioteca Vaticana”, agregó Pasini. Otros proyectos, como uno con la Biblioteca de Oxford. ampliarán la propuesta.
REFERENCIA
Nota al 3 de febrero 2003: he entrado en la página y sí están los manuscritos que se mencionan en la nota, el resto de los catálogos, aún seguiremos esperando. Estoy ansiosa por ver los incunables.

Sunday, April 25, 2010

Manuscritos iluminados en el Getty Center Museum


Hoy estuve visitando el Getty Center Museum, en Los Angeles, California. Mi intención era ver la muestra de los bocetos de Da Vinci para sus esculturas, pero me llevé la gran sorpresa que además había una exposición sobre Manuscritos Iluminados con ilustraciones de arquitectura (!!!) y mejor aún, me han permitido fotografiar algunos ejemplares sin flash. Creo que no quedó intersticio sin fotografiar, de tanta ansiedad que me produjo el primer permiso de mi vida para sacar fotos dentro de un museo, así pues, sean amables y vean que estas fotos tienen derechos, me piden permiso para reproducir, sí?
Volviendo al tema, por el hábito de bajar fotos de sitios en Internet, uno se pierde mucho de la esencia del objeto en cuestión, en este caso los libros. Me reprocho a mí misma no haber imaginado que los manuscritos iluminados poseen, en su mayoría, texturas por las distintas tintas y materiales, incluso en los ropajes de los personajes, de poder traspasar los vidrios hubiera acariciado los pliegues. Un placer inolvidable para los amantes de los libros, del arte y la arquitectura.


Una guía para la realización de las letras M y N




Para mayor información sobre la muestra

Monday, March 15, 2010

What is the Art of Illumination?


¨The desire for decoration is probably as old as the human race. Nature, of course, is the source of beauty, and this natural beauty affects something within us which has or is the faculty of reproducing the cause of its emotion in a material form. Whether the reproduction be such as to appeal to the eye or the ear depends on the cast of the faculty. In a mild or elementary form, probably both casts of faculty exist in every animated creature, and especially in the human being.
Art being the intelligent representation of that quality of beauty which appeals to any particular observer, whoever exercises the faculty of such representation is an artist.
Greatness or otherwise is simply the measure of the faculty, for in Nature herself there is no restriction. There is always enough of beauty in Nature to fill the mightiest capacity of human genius. Artists, therefore, are measured by comparison with each other in reference to the fraction of art which they attempt to reproduce.


The art of illumination does not aim at more than the gratification of those who take pleasure in books. Its highest ambition is to make books beautiful.
To some persons, perhaps, all ordinary books are ugly and distasteful. Probably they are so to the average schoolboy. Hence the laudable endeavour among publishers of school-books to make them attractive. The desire that books should be made attractive is of great antiquity. How far back in the world's history we should have to go to get in front of it we cannot venture to reckon. The methods of making books attractive are numerous and varied. That to which we shall confine our attention is a rather special one. Both its processes and its results are peculiar. Mere pictures or pretty ornamental letters in sweet colours and elegant drawing do not constitute illumination, though they do form essential contributions towards it; and, indeed, in the sixteenth century the clever practitioners who wished, in bright colours, to awaken up the old woodcuts used to call themselves illuminists, and the old German books which taught how the work should be done were called Illuminir bücher. Illuminists were not illuminators.
In the twelfth century when, as far as we know, the word illuminator was first applied to one who practised the art of book decoration, it meant one who “lighted up” the page of the book with bright colours and burnished gold.
These processes suggest the definition of the art. Perfect illumination must contain both colours and metals. To this extent it is in perfect unison with the other mediæval art of heraldry; it might almost be called a twin-sister.
As an art it is much older than its name. We find something very like it even among the ancient Egyptians, for in the Louvre at Paris is a papyrus containing paintings of funeral ceremonies, executed in bright colours and touched in its high lights with pencilled gold. But after this for many centuries there remains no record of the existence of any such art until just before the Christian era. Then, indeed, we have mention of a lady artist who painted a number of miniature portraits for the great biographical work of the learned Varro. We must carefully observe, however, that there is a distinction between illumination and mere miniature painting. Sometimes it is true that miniatures—as e.g. those of the early Byzantine artists, and afterwards those of Western Europe—were finished with touches of gold to represent the lights. This brought them into the category of illuminations, for while miniatures may be executed without the use of gold or silver, illuminations may not. There are thousands of miniatures that are not illuminations.
At the period when illuminating was at its best the miniature, in its modern sense of a little picture, was only just beginning to appear as a noticeable feature, and the gold was as freely applied to it as to the penmanship or the ornament. But such is not the case with miniature painting generally.
Lala of Cyzicus, the lady artist just referred to, lived in the time of Augustus Cæsar. She has the honour of being the first miniaturist on record, and is said to have produced excellent portraits “in little,” especially those of ladies, on both vellum and ivory. Her own portrait, representing her engaged in painting a statuette, is still to be seen among the precious frescoes preserved in the museum at Naples.
The term “miniature,” now applied to this class of work, has been frequently explained. It is derived from the Latin word minium, or red paint, two pigments being anciently known by this name—one the sulphide of mercury, now known also as “vermilion,” the other a lead oxide, now called “red lead.” It is the latter which is generally understood as the minium of the illuminators, though both were used in manuscript work. The red paint was employed to mark the initial letters or sections of the MS. Its connection with portraiture and other pictorial subjects on a small scale is entirely owing to its accidental confusion by French writers with their own wordmignon, and so with the Latin minus. In classical times, among the Romans, the “miniator” was simply a person who applied theminium, and had nothing to do with pictures or portraits at all, but with the writing. That the rubrication of titles, however, was somewhat of a luxury may be gathered from the complaint of Ovid when issuing the humble edition of his verses from his lonely exile of Tomi:—
“Parve (nec invideo) sine me liber ibis in urbem:
Hei mihi quo domino non licet ire tuo.
.        .        .        .        .
Nec te purpureo velent vaccinia succo
Non est conveniens luctibus ille color.
Nec titulus minio, nec cedro carta notetur
Candida nec nigra cornua fronte geras.”[1]
Tristia, Cl. 1, Eleg. 1.

[1]“Go, little book, nor do I forbid,—go without me into that city where, alas! I may enter never more.... Nor shall whortleberries adorn thee with their crimson juice; that colour is not suitable for lamentations. Nor shall thy title be marked with minium, nor thy leaf scented with cedar-oil. Nor shalt thou bear horns of ivory or ebony upon thy front.”
There are many allusions in these pathetic lines which would bear annotation, but space forbids. The one point is the use of minium.¨

Reference
Transcription from ¨Illuminated Manuscripts¨. Chapter I. Author: John W. Bradley Release. Bracken Books, London. Date: November 19, 2006 [EBook #19870]
The Project Gutenberg EBook of Illuminated Manuscripts. www.gutenberg.org
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