Monday, January 24, 2011

Designer Religion

"The Book came in seven weighty folio volumes with more than 3,000 pages and 250 plates of engravings covering all the religions known to Europeans in the early 1700s.

It was called 'Cérémonies et Coutumes Religieuses de tous les Peuples du Monde' [Religious Ceremonies and Customs of all the peoples of the world].

Published between 1723 and 1737, all its volumes bore the name of Bernard Picart, the most famous engraver of the 18th century after Hogarth, on whom Picart in fact had a direct influence. 'Religious Ceremonies' was published by Jean Frederic Bernard, who was also the unsung compiler, editor and author of this pioneering work on the world's religions.

The volumes began with Judaism and Catholicism, moved on to the Americas and India, then to Asia and Africa, only to return to the familiar, to the many forms of Protestantism, before finally tackling Islam. No other work before then had ever attempted, in word and image, such a grand sweep of human religions.

'Religious ceremonies' marked a major turning point in European attitudes toward religious belief and hence the sacred. It sowed the radical idea that religions could be compared on equal terms, and therefore that all religions were equally worthy of respect -- and criticism." [source]



Tableau des Principales Religions du Monde
Tableau des Principales Religions du Monde

FRONTISPIECE: "Representation of the main religions of the world; landscape with, in the foreground, group of Muslim men sitting around another one, standing and preaching; in the middleground, crowd gathered around the Roman Church, represented by a female figure wearing a tiara and holding an open book; she tramples underfoot a rabbi unrolling parchment with hebraic inscription, and a female figure in amour holding a Victory, representing the Roman Empire; an old woman with crown of thorns, personifying Superstition, grabs the Victory; on the left Christian Religion personified stands under a tree, with an open Bible a Franciscan monk is trying to close; in front of them, a priest baptizing a woman; in the background, scenes of pagan cults.." [source]




Les Free Massons
Les Free Massons

This curious print was engraved by I.F. after a drawing by Louis Fabrice du Bourg from information supplied by John Pine, a Masonic Lodge member and student of the book's overall illustration designer, Bernard Picart. That convoluted background seems appropriate not only because of the esoteric nature of Freemasonry itself, but because the central portrait high on the wall - Sir Richard Steele - has been the subject of speculative analysis since the print was first published.

Research conducted over the last two hundred years has failed to prove whether or not Steele was in fact a member of a Masonic Lodge. His great claim to fame in the history of Freemasonry appears to be a couple of oblique references to the fraternity made in articles he wrote for the Tatler newspaper, which he had co-founded. For instance, from 1709: "You see these accost each other with effeminate airs, they have their signs and tokens like Freemasons". This may well have been the first ever mention of the Freemasons in the British press.

For general background see:
"It represents in the foreground the Worshipful Master, his Wardens and Brethren, all in the costume of the early part of the last century; beyond them stretches a table in the shape of a square, and behind this table rises a high panelled wainscoting. The panel is divided into 129 smaller squares, on each of which appears a number, the copy of a tavern sign, and the name of the tavern in question. . . . . The plate is valuable as showing us the Masonic costume of the period, and curious as suggesting that Sir Richard Steele must have been a Freemason. It is indeed our only evidence on that point as, although many expressions in his writings might be held to confirm such a view, we have no record in lodge minutes, or members' lists, that such was the case."
[Bro. Speth, 1800s as quoth in 1919]




Annee de Mexiquains (7)
Siècle des Mexiquains

"A circular disc representing the various years and months within the Mexican Century [siècle]. The serpent that surrounds the circle marks out four different sections with its coils, and divides the circle into an upside-down compass. The North points down and is represented by the spearhead: Tecpatl; East is represented by a Cane: Acatl; West by a House: Cagli; and South by a rabbit: Tochtlila. There are 16 hieroglyphics equally distributed between each four sections." [source]

The illustration design is {'said to have been'} copied/adapted from one produced by Theodore de Bry in the late 16th century. It appears to be a faithful depiction of an Aztec calendar stone, fairly similar to artifacts uncovered in 1790 [previously]




Deuil des Femmes Greques a Rama + Bapteme des Grecs dans le Jourdain (V. 3)
Deuil des Femmes Greques à Rama
&
Baptême des Grecs dans le Jourdain

Greek women mourning at (?)Rama
&
Greek baptism in the river Jordan

(I confess to being confused by both the wording and imagery here. My first inclination is to wonder if 'Greek' is being misapplied; otherwise is it used as a stand-in/euphemism for 'little known peoples' or.. ?)



Diverses Pagodes ou Penitences des Faquirs (V. 6)
Diverses Pagodes où Penitences des Faquirs

Indian fakirs (or sadhus*) perform penance rituals (physical contortion, austerity measures etc) at the site of various pagodas or temples (my interpretation)

Addit: immediately prior to posting this entry, I came across another, much larger version (here) of this illustration which comes from Columbia University Professor Frances Pritchett's page on the Picard illustrations.



Ceremonie Nuptiale du Japon + Ceremonie Funebre du Japon (V 6)
Ceremonie Nuptiale du Japon
&
Ceremonie Funebre du Japon

Japanese wedding and funeral ceremonies



Idoles Chinois + Les Dieux des Chinois
Idoles Chinois
&
Les Dieux des Chinois

Chinese idols and Gods

Picard notes in the engravings that his source for the illustration was the Jesuits and that one of the pictures (at least!) was copied from Athanasius Kircher's 'China Monumentis' [previously]



Dgi-Guerdgi Albanois qui porte au Bezestein des Foyes de Mouton pour nourrir les Chats (V. 5)
Dgi-Guerdgi Albanois qui porte au Bezestein
des Foyes de Mouton pour nourrir les Chats


The Albanian Dgi-Guerdgi feeding cats in the
bazaar in Constantinople with sheep liver

One supposes this to be more of a cultural than ceremonial or religious example. It appears to have been copied from an engraving that appeared in the 1705 book called 'Recueil de cent Estampes Representant differentes Nations du Levant..' [see colour version and NYPL has all of the delightfully eccentric illustrations from that book] after the original painting by Jean-Baptiste Vanmour.



La Danse des Deruis (V. 5)
La Danse des Deruis

The whirling Dervish - a mystical Sufi practice (posted previously), commonly performed in a Mevlevi Sema ceremony in Turkey. This illustration also derives from the 1705 '..Levant..' book mentioned above.



La Penitence des Juifs Allemans dans leur Synagogue AND Pretre des Gaures
Penitence des Juiſs Allemans dans leur Synagogue
&
Grand Prêtre des Gaures ou Perses devant
le feu ayant à la main son rituel.
Trois Différentes Têtes de prêtres gaures
avec la mitre et la bouche couverte

-(these two images are not related)-

Penitence (penance?) of the German Jews in their Synagogue
&
Grand Priest performing a ritual and three different types of priest head covering. Perhaps related to Persians. [Anyone have an idea about who the Gaur(e)s are?? nb. ----> UPDATE: see first comment below]



La Dedicace de la Sinagogue de Juifs Portugais a Amsterdam
La Dedicace de la Sinagogue de Juiſs Portugais a Amsterdam

The dedication of the Portuguese Synagogue in Amsterdam
"Sephardic Jews fleeing Spain and Portugal during the persecutions of the 16th and early 17th centuries settled in an eastern Amsterdam neighbourhood that became known as the Jewish Quarter. In light of the ongoing conflict between the Dutch Republic and Spain, the community referred to themselves as 'Portuguese Jews'."
The Synagogue (the Esnoga) was completed in 1675 and was, at the time, the largest Synagogue in the world.

[As an aside, there's a reference to Picard's having purposefully created two distinct styles of illustrating Jewish people as a means to critique the influx of Ashkenazi Jews into Amsterdam]



Temple du Japon ou il y a mille Idoles (V. 6)
Temple du Japon ou il y a mille Idoles

The Japanese Temple of a thousand idols (?) somehow became known as the Temple of 10,000 idols when this engraving was copied and widely circulated in the 19th century.



La Communion des Lutheriens dans l'Eglise des Minorites a Augsbourg (V. 3)
La communion des Lutheriens dans l'Eglise des Minorites à Augsbourg

Picard's engraving of a Lutheran communion ceremony inside the Church of Minorities in Augsburg is said to be after an original painting by the German artist, Caterine Sperling Heckel (d. 1741).



Le Convoi Funebre + Le corps expose dan le Choeur + On jette l'Eau Benite sur le corps apres qu'on la Descendu dans la Fosse (V. 2)
Le Convoi Funbre.
Le Corps Expos dans le Choeur.
On jette L'Eau Benite sur le Corps apres qu'on la Descendu dan la Fosse.
"The Funeral Procession. The Body Shown in the Choir. Holy Water Sprinkled on the Body, Then It Is Lowered into the Grave. Three images depict aspects of religious ceremony associated with burial. The first is a formal procession with clergy and mourners carrying the coffin through the town. The second shows the coffin draped with a cloth emblazoned with the cross set in the church choir between rows of lighted candles. A cantor stands by the large choir book; clergy and mourners pray. The final image is of burial under the stone slab floor of the church. Clergy and mourners gather around; after holy water is sprinkled, the body is lowered into the grave. We see the dirt being shoveled back into the hole." [source]



Greek and Turkish clergy AND people condemned by the Inquisition

(again, these are unrelated pages combined for presentation purposes)

The left panel has various Greek & Turkish bishops and priests and, inexplicably, a Greek fiancée on a "sopha"

The right panel shows people sentenced by the Inquisition: the two at the top confessed and avoided the fate of those below: being burnt alive



Ixora, Divinite des Indes Orientales + Quenvadi, fils d'Ixora AND Le Bairam ou la Paque des Mohametans

Left page: Indian Hindu Gods, Ixora (Ishvara) or Shiva, and his son Quenevadi (Ganapati) or Ganesha

Right page: 'Le Bairam ou la Paque des Mohametans'
A traditional Mohammedan Feast (the end of Ramadan) in an Eastern City with men on swings above the crowded streets


Isis, Osiris and Horus AND Idoles de Campeche, Iucatan et Tabasco

Left page: Egyptian Gods Isis, Osiris and Horus

Right page: Idoles de Campêche et de Iucatan; Idoles de Tabasco

(Idols of Haiti and Mexico)

[click through on any image for a greatly enlarged version]


The University of Heidelberg presents 'Histoire Général des Cérémonies, Moeurs et Coutumes Religieuses de tous les Peuples du Monde: Représentées en 243 Figures' in seven volumes
[click on a volume - Band - then anything below 'Inhalt' and then on 'Vorschau' to get thumbnail pages].

This is something of a bowdlerized 1741 version of the book series - originally released between 1723 and 1737 - mentioned in the quote at the top of this entry. The revision (by Banier and Le Mascrier) did not alter the illustrations at all and the changes to the text hardly affected the enormous impact the series would have across Europe. The modifications tended to remove some satirical elements and factual errors and (predictably) introduced proclamations asserting the primacy of Catholicism over all other faiths and doctrines.




Puzza sous une forme parallele a JSIS assise sur la fleur de LOTOS (detail)

Monday, January 10, 2011

Floriated Ornament

"Reacting to the tradition of neo-classicism as early as the 1830's, English architects and decorators took a renewed interest in the art of Gothic cathedrals. This movement, called Gothic Revival, shaped the whole Victorian era and was on a scale that had no equivalent in other European countries. In the midst of the industrial boom, the enthusiasm for the Gothic period, seen as an exemplary society in which the arts blossomed in a mystical and fraternal spirit, was set against the effects, considered degrading, of mechanisation.

Augustus Pugin (1812-1852) was the first to rediscover in Gothic art the principle of a close union between art, craftsmanship and technique. His main treatises of architecture and decoration, such as 'Floriated Ornament' (1849), were to influence for a long time the artists of the Arts and Crafts movement. Today, the magnificent decoration of the London Houses of Parliament still testifies to his virtuosity as a decorator and a colourist." [source]


decorative motifs of snow crystals



Floriated ornament - 19th cent. decorative designs



Pugin's gothic revival designs



decoration drawings by Pugin 1850



Pugin gothic revival illustrations



Floriated ornament, a series of thirty-one designs, 1849 - Augustus Welby Northmore Pugin a



Floriated ornament, a series of thirty-one designs, 1849 - Augustus Welby Northmore Pugin j



Floriated ornament, a series of thirty-one designs, 1849 - Augustus Welby Northmore Pugin k



Floriated ornament, a series of thirty-one designs, 1849 - Augustus Welby Northmore Pugin



Floriated ornament, a series of thirty-one designs, 1849 - Augustus Welby Northmore Pugin e



Floriated ornament, a series of thirty-one designs, 1849 - Augustus Welby Northmore Pugin d


'Floriated Ornament: a series of thirty-one designs' (1849) by Augustus WN Pugin was recently digitised by The Smithsonian Institution. It is hosted within their fabulous Galaxy Image Database [previoiusly] and was discovered via The Smithsonian Libraries blog.
"Pugin's plea in this book was for designers to go directly to nature itself, as medieval designers had done, instead of making use of already conventionalised classical or antique ornament, which architects and designers had used since the period of the Italian Renaissance. He also felt that, to derive the greatest decorative value from natural forms, the structure of plants should be studied and exploited (as he maintained the medieval artists had done), instead of (as contemporary decorative artists were wont to do) painting realistic bunches of fiowers, etc., imitating a three dimensional effect in their decorations of flat objects. On this point, Pugin was in advance of the decorative theories of Owen Jones, Christopher Dresser, and William Morris."
----Elzea et al: 'The Pre-Raphaelite Era, 1848-1914', 1976 [source]

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Dutch Town Atlas

Theatrum Iconographicum
Omnium Urbium



pl003
Harderwijk



pl005
Groenlo



pl007
Tiel



pl009
Wageningen



pl012
Gelre (Geldern)



pl016a
Leiden, Burcht



pl016b
Leiden, Lakenhal



pl017
Leiden



pl018
Amsterdam



pl018a
Amsterdam, brandspuit Van der Heyden



pl018c
Amsterdam, profiel (Joan de Ram)



pl018d
Amsterdam, Beurs



pl018e
Amsterdam, Nieuwezijdskapel



pl018f
Amsterdam, profiel



pl037
Zierikzee



pl044a
Utrecht



pl071b
Antwerpen, Oostershuis



pl072
Mechelen



pl112
Luik (Liège)



pl071c
Antwerpen, Stadhuis



The late 17th century Stedenboek (book of cities) by Dutch cartographer Frederik de Wit is one of the rarest map books in the world. Only four copies are know to exist and the finest version has been digitised and uploaded by the National Library of The Netherlands. [Flash and html formats are available]

De Wit was among the last of the renowned cartographers in what is referred to as the Golden Age of Dutch cartography. Common to all his work was superb engraving and exceptional colouring qualities that resulted in maps of unique beauty and historical interest.

This city collection might even be thought of as the culmination of a century's effort by Dutch urban cartography. De Wit was able to acquire engraved copper plates of towns produced in the mid-1600s by the esteemed Blaeu and Jansson families. These were both copied and modified and accompanied original map designs de Wit engraved himself for the exquisite Stedenboek.

Sunday, January 2, 2011

Natural South Carolina

Live Oak, Ivory Billed Wood-pecker
Original title: Live Oak; Ivory Billed Wood-pecker
Common name: Laurel oak; Ivory-billed woodpecker
Scientific name: Quercus laurifolia | Campephilus principalis



Magnolia or Laurel-Flower
Original title: Magnolia or Laurel-Flower
Common name: Southern magnolia
Scientific name: Magnolia grandiflora*



Flying-Fish as large as life, Dolphin
Original title: Flying-Fish as large as life; Dolphin
Common name: Sailfin flyingfish
Scientific name: Parexocoetus brachypterus




Helisa, (Queen butterfly)
Original title: Helisa; [Queen butterfly]
Common name: Milkweed; Queen butterfly
Scientific name: Asclepias [variegata?] | Danaus gillipus




Blue Jay, Crab Tree
Original title: Blue Jay; Crab Tree
Common name: Blue jay; Flowering crabapple
Scientific name: Cyanocitta cristata | Malus augustifolia



Balsam Apple
Original title + common name: Balsam Apple
Scientific name: Momordica balsamina or Momordica charantia



Locust, Red Bird
Original title: Locust; Red Bird
Common name: Black locust; Cardinal
Scientific name: Robinia pseudoacacia | Cardinalis cardinalis



Summer Drake
Original title: Summer Drake
Common name: Wood duck
Scientific name: Aix sponsa



Sweet Scented Small Melon
Original title: Sweet Scented Small Melon
Common name: Watermelon [?] {Or not}*
Scientific name: Citrullis vulgaris [?]



Trumpet Tree
Original title: Trumpet Tree
Common name: Cow itch vine
Scientific name: Campsis radicans



Punchapau of East Florida or Oleander
Original title: Punchapau of East Florida or Oleander
Common name: Oleander
Scientific name: Nerium oleander


[click on any image for an enlarged version]


The Ethelind Pope Brown Collection of South Carolina Natural History at the University of South Carolina consists of thirty two watercolour sketches of flora and fauna from the South East United States, produced between about 1765 and 1775.

The series has been attributed at one time or another to such luminary natural history artists as John Abbott[previously] and Mark Catesby[previously], and although the true painter remains officially unknown, expert opinion now favours the sketches having been produced by a local amateur artist called John Laurens. [info]