Saturday, March 24, 2007

Drawing on the Renaissance

Tarot Cards - Le Fou and La Pendu


Tarot Cards - La Lune and La Mort

Known as the Charles VI Tarot Deck these late 15th century hand painted cards are among 17 that have survived from a series produced in northern Italy and here depict the fool, the hangman, the moon and death. It's also known as the Gringonneur deck after the artist from the end of the 14th century who is said to have painted (some of?) the earliest tarot decks for King Charles VI. These cards are certainly an example from a very early tarot work but I'm not sure where they sit in an historical sense - a quick look around the web didn't identify any standout authorities for me. In any event, this deck appears in the present exhibition site as an example of how allegorical, emblematic and symbolic iconography from the renaissance circulated in popular (if elite) form. [Tarot].


Sketch by Andrea Casalini for an armor helmet


Sketch by Andrea Casalini for an armor helmet (detail)

Helmet design sketch (and detail) in the mannerist style from ~1575 by Andrea Casalini for a suit of armour for Alexander Farnese, Duke of Parma and Governor-General of Holland. The exuberant decoration and presentation of a war accessory as an artistic object reflects a wider emergence of tournaments, festivals and processions of armies as subjects for aesthetic presentation.


Nicolo dell'Abate sketch - The Unicorn Chariot


Nicolo dell'Abate sketch - The Unicorn Chariot (detail)

Nicolo dell'Abate sketch and detail from ~1563 - 'Le Char des Licornes' (The Unicorn Chariot) - featuring motifs and mythological imagery from the antiquities. The sketch was the basis for a tapestry featuring Marie de Medici and Henri IV. Dell'Abate was one of the italian artists who helped to disseminate italian renaissance/mannerist styles to France via the School of Fontainebleau (see: i, ii, iii).


Pierre Jacques sketch of the 3-headed dog, Cerberus


Pierre Jacques - sketch of man and animal heads from roman sculpture
Pierre Jacques, a sculptor from Reims, spent about 5 years in Italy in the 1570s. He produced an album of sketches of ancient roman statue features. The whole album is online at BNF [the 2nd image above was nabbed from here] and if anyone is keen (and reads french) there is a long article from 1894 here in page image format, establishing the date and bona fides of the author and subject matter and its importance in the development of the french renaissance etc ('etc' means that it was eventually a bit over my head both in content and language).


2 sketches by René Boyvin - torch carrier and masquerade figures

René Boyvin (previously) was also strongly connected to the School of Fontainebleau and the 2 figures here depict a torch carrier and a masquerade character sketch. {2nd half of 16th century}


Sketch by Albrecht Dürer of checker players

This sketch by Albrecht Dürer from 1492/3 consists of 2 fragments, a couple playing backgammon and the standing woman playing checkers. They were designs for stained glass pieces, a field in which artisans from southern Germany excelled during a transition from gothic to renaissance characteristics. A certain simplicity of drawing style was required for the stained glass work, a skill Dürer would again employ to great success with wood and metal engraving.


François Clouet sketches of Elizabeth of Austria and Elizabeth of France

It was quite by accident that I chose these 2 François Clouet portraits or at least, I wasn't aware that Élisabeth d'Autriche (Austria) [1571], who married into the french Royal Court and Élisabeth de Valois [1559] who married into the spanish Royal Court both had similarly unhappy lives. Élisabeth de Valois married at age 14 and died during childbirth aged 23. Élisabeth d'Autriche married the (mad) Charles IX and when he died 4 years later, she retreated to her homeland rather than remarry and continue life at Court. François Clouet replaced his father as the official portraitist for the french Royal Court in 1540. His drawings are considered masterpieces for their simplicity, exquisite beauty and accuracy.


Henri Lerambert sketch of King's funeral procession - details of horse covering

'Défilé des funérailles du roi Mausole : Chevaux caparaçonnés' (~1570) by Henri Lerambert was also a product of the School of Fontainebleau. The funeral procession of ancient greek King Mausolus was the basis for a tapestry. The grid lines seen in the sketch allowed squares to be enlarged to their final size after the design was accepted. (See: i, ii, iii)


Giulio Campi drawings - La Prudence and La Justice
The allegorical virtues Prudence and Justice (~1550) by Giulio Campi , a leading mannerist artisan of the Cremona group in Lombardy, Italy.


The 'Dessins de la Renaissance' exhibition site at BNF has an extensive collection of drawings, essentially exploring how the themes of the renaissance spread through France. Lucky you if your french reading skills are strong. Most, if not all, the library stamps were removed and I did a very minimal amount of artifact cleaning in a few of these.

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The satirical prints below have nothing at all (well, directly anyway) to do with the renaissance and come from a site to note for the future - British Printed Images to 1700, being developed by a number of British repositories. At present there are only about 10 prints available but they give the impression that this will be a formidable and exemplary site when the planned 10,000 prints have all been put online. [via]


Riding of the Ass - satirical print from England

'A picture of the Ridinge of the Asse' (anonymous) from ~1607.


This Costly Fish Catcht in a Weil - British satirical print

'This Costly Fish Catcht In's Weil All These Desire To Tast As Wel As Feele. at All times in Season' {a 'Weil' is a kind of lobster pot - a metaphor for marriage} (from about 1682 but it is a variation on a motif with a convoluted history)
Doll heard what each man said,
She vext, and was half dismaid,
Hold, she cried tis time I think
To cut the cord; let her sink.
You all strive to set her free,
Not one of you will pull for mee.

Tuesday, March 20, 2007

Capturing the Soul of the Americas

"If your highness may be pleased to have the Holy Gospel preached to the people in those provinces with the necessary zeal, God our Lord will be served and many idolatries and notable sins which the devil has implanted among the natives will be eradicated. Thus having succeeded in this holy purpose your royal crown will be served by an increase of vassals, tributes, and royal fifths." - Baltasar Obregón to the king, Mexico City, 15841

Emblematic Owl Image


Bernardo Buil with the Emperor


Spanish fleet sail to America


Easter service on whale by Saint Brendan


South American Natives on Sea Monster


Spanish explorers meet Peruvian natives


Peruvian indians fight arriving spanish explorers


Indians from Peru fight Spanish invaders


Devil Idols from Peru


South American devil worship idols


Emblem: Saint Brandan in cloud in sky in America


Catholic priests assemble American natives


Spanish soldier knighted


Spaniards and Peruvians in 15th century parade


Christoper Columbus and the mythological map


Nova Typis Transacta Navigatio - titlepage


Detail of monsters from Caspar Plautius's voyage book
[click for full size versions - a couple have had some age related artifact cleaned]

'Nova Typis Transacta Navigatio. Novi Orbis Indiae Occidentalis' from 1621 is online at the Digital Library of Rare Books at the University of São Paulo in Brazil (click book image to open an easy viewing window; click on book pages to enlarge).

This extraordinary and very rare book weaves fact and fantasy as it narrates the adventures of a group of Benedictine missionaries led by Father Bernardo Buil, who accompanied Christopher Columbus on his 2nd voyage to the New World.

In an audacious editorial move, the author is billed as Honorius Philoponus and an exceedingly complimentary dedication to the Abbot of Seitenstetten in Austria, Caspar Plautius, opens the text. The thing is, Honorius Philoponus is actually a pseudonym for - you guessed it - Caspar Plautius. There's nothing like writing your own reference!

A similarly extravagant plot move involved blending the legend of the 5th century voyage to magical islands by the Irish Saint Brendan with the 1493 Columbian expedition. In the 4th image from the top, St Brendan is depicted celebrating Easter mass on the back of a whale, Jasconius, as part of the quest for the Promised Land of the Saints, during which, some say St Brendan discovered America. At the top of that image is an island named after St Brendan, a mythical cartographic oddity, often included on world maps up until the 18th century.

As with many of the engravings (all attributed to Wolfgang Kilian) the St Brendan/whale image has evocative symbolic meaning - having the Easter mass on the whale as a major pictorial element dominating the map suggests that religious devotion combined with mastery of the oceans and nature made discovery and conquering of the New World an inevitability of divine providence.

The rather theatrical depiction of Columbus (3rd last image) was in fact copied from an illustration by Theodore de Bry of the Conquistador, Francisco Pizarro - this despite Plautius asserting in his dedication that the de Bry voyage books circulated falsehoods.

Although prone to embellishment (some of the engravings obviously hint at the preoccupation with cannibalism, native barbarity and assumed satanic beliefs), the "work is nonetheless filled with authentic details of Caribbean customs, agricultural products, local flora and fauna, and arts". It includes one of the earliest illustrations of the potato plant as well as a musical score for native chanting.

Monday, March 19, 2007

The Gero Codex

Codex Gero


10th century illuminated gospel manuscript


Gero Codex - illuminated manuscript


Gero Codex - Reichenau Monastery manuscript


Gospel scene from Gero Codex


Ottonian illuminations in Gero Codex


Ottonian painting - 10th century illuminated manuscript


illuminated manuscript from germany (letter S)


German illuminated manuscript - gospels (letter C)


10th century gospels in illuminated manuscript (letter N)


carolingian writing in illuminated manuscript


illuminated manuscript - carolingian miniscule


carolingian miniscule from 10th century gospel manuscript


decorated letters in german codex


carolingian script from reichenau monastery manuscript


illuminated letters in 10th century monastery manuscript


manuscript writing from german monastery


Codex Gero carolingian script

[click for larger versions]


This exquisitely beautiful manuscript, based at least in part on the Lorsch Gospels, was created in about 969 AD for Archbishop Gero of Cologne. I suppose there may have been restorative work carried out in modern times but the quality of preservation, after the passage of more than a thousand years, seems remarkable. Written in carolingian miniscule, the Gero Codex is the earliest of the Gospel manuscripts produced in the Swabian Abbey of Reichenau.

All of the full page miniatures are featured above and as far as I can make out from some rough translations, they include Saint Peter and the 4 Evangelists, Archbishop Gero and the presentation of the completed manuscript to him.

The Gero Codex [HS. 1948: Gero-Codex, Evangelistar UuLB Darmstadt] is housed today in the State Library in Darmstadt and the web presentation of the ~360 page manuscript is hosted by Manuscripta Mediaevalia (don't worry if the first page doesn't load, just arrow across - the miniatures are at the front of the work).
"The Register [pdf] of world documentary heritage currently comprises 91 documents from 45 countries. Included since the end of 2003 are the ten illuminated manuscripts from the monastery on the island of Reichenau in Lake Constance, which itself had been added to the list of UNESCO World Heritage already in 2000. The manuscripts are outstanding specimens of Ottonian book illustration in Germany. They have been selected as examples of the development of the monastic scriptorium, and of artistic innovation in book decoration. They are distinctive for the iconographic themes in their miniatures, and for the way in which they relate to the religious, political and cultural history of their time. The manuscripts are thus representative of the entire group of surviving manuscripts with Ottonian illumination from the Reichenau.

In the 10th and 11th centuries, the Benedictine Abbey of Reichenau housed an artists' workshop, which was probably the largest and most influential in Europe. During its main period of activity, between c. 970 and 1010-20, a series of mainly liturgical manuscripts with precious decoration was produced there, commissioned by the most prominent members of contemporary society - Bishops of the Empire, Kings and Emperors. With vivid artistic imagination and remarkable innovation, the monks created great works of art whose beauty and perfection continue to fascinate us. Their design was inspired by Carolingian book illumination from the workshop at the court of Charlemagne, as well as by early Christian and Byzantine models."