A Medieval Best-Seller?
Transcription
A Medieval Best-Seller?
A Medieval Best-Seller? New Acquisitions of Books of Hours It is a commonplace to describe Books of Hours as “the medieval best-sellers,” but it is also true that they are among the most commercially successful manuscripts in the modern world. There has probably never been a moment since the Middle Ages when it has not been possible to buy a manuscript Book of Hours. Only billionaires today can realistically possess Rembrandts or Monets: very few academic art historians could hope to do so. This is not so with Books of Hours. Even now, a moderate medieval Book of Hours … is not at all beyond the aspirations of any scholar on a normal professional or university salary. The experience of walking through the countryside with a chunky little medieval Book of Hours in one’s pocket or of looking at it in bed at night is magical …. There are Books of Hours still living in the wild and, when all have been chased and captured, the world will have lost something precious and very old. – Christopher de Hamel, “Books of Hours and the Art Market,” in Books of Hours Reconsidered, edited by Sandra Hindman and James H. Marrow, Turnhout, Brepols, and London, Harvey Miller, 2013, pp. 39-48. 1. BOOK OF HOURS (Use of Rome) In Latin, illuminated manuscript on parchment Southern Netherlands, Bruges, c. 1450 37 full page miniatures, 13 small miniatures, and 8 historiated initials illustrated by the Masters of the Gold Scrolls (Berlin, Kunstbibliothek, MS Gris. 4) This Book of Hours is exceptionally rich both in text (it is almost 400 folios thick) and in illustration, including nearly sixty pictures. It was certainly made as a special commission, and the original owner (a Franciscan Tertiary), along with his wife, is represented twice in the manuscript. The illuminator was also responsible for a related manuscript in Berlin and others that form a distinct subgroup, according to Gregory Clark. Noteworthy are the numerous marginal scenes, often related to the main miniatures. The text includes the unusual Hours for the Days of the Week. [BOH 76] $ 400,000 3 2. BOOK OF HOURS (Use of Rouen) In Latin and French, illuminated manuscript on parchment France, Normandy (Lisieux, Sées?), c. 1480 11 large miniatures, 8 square miniatures, 7 small miniatures, and 6 historiated initials by 2 anonymous artists This imposing Book of Hours, richly illuminated with a remarkable series of miniatures, defies precise localization, although it was undoubtedly made in Normandy and its illuminators were familiar with Rouen painting of the generation that produced the Playfair Hours. It was special ordered for a female patron and her daughter who appear in one of the miniatures. An impressive and unusual series of illustrations associate each Gospel reading with a different event of the Marian cycle. [BOH 72] $ 140,000 3. BOOK OF HOURS (Use of Rome) In Latin, illuminated manuscript on parchment Southern Netherlands, likely Bruges, c. 1460-1470 2 full-page miniatures by the Master of the Lee Hours These Horae contain two remarkably high-quality miniatures from an original cycle that must have comprised thirty miniatures. According to Gregory Clark, the artist is the Master of the Lee Hours, named after a Book of Hours once owned by Ronald Lee that was made for the Duke Charles the Bold and his wife Isabelle of Bourbon. Working in the circle of Willem Vrelant and perhaps identical with the Alexander Master, he was one of the notable painters at the Burgundian court, and the donor of the present book, figured in one of its two miniatures, is dressed as a courtier of this court. [BOH 56] $ 65,000 4 4. BOOK OF HOURS (Use of Rome and of Sainte-Waudru, the Collegiate Church in Mons) In Latin, illuminated manuscript on parchment Southern Netherlands, Mons (Hainaut), c. 1450-1475 8 large and 2 small miniatures by the Master of Philippe of Croy and 2 large grisaille miniatures by a second unidentified hand Of an uncommon liturgical use, this Book of Hours was likely commissioned for a patron or canoness of Sainte-Waudru [Saint Waletrudis], the collegiate church in Mons. The marginal decoration contains heraldic symbols including arms, a motto “Riens plus,” and a monogram. The arms are currently unidentified but resemble the seal of local burgher, Colart Maselant (1456-1458). There are two hands responsible for the miniatures. The first, the Master of Philippe of Croy, named after the books he made in the period of 1457 to 1463 for the Burgundian nobleman of that name, many copied by Jacquemart Pilavaine, painted the color miniatures, and a second hand, influenced by Jean le Tavernier, painted two very delicate miniatures in grisaille. [BOH 97] $ 100,000 5 5. HOURS OF JEAN LE SAUVAGE AND JACQUELINE DE BOULOGNE (Use of Rome) In Latin and French, illuminated manuscript on parchment Flanders or Northern France, Tournai or Lille, dated 1503 15 large and 5 small miniatures by Jean Markant Important for the history of miniature painting in the region of Lille and Tournai, this is the very manuscript around which the career of its artist-scribe, Jean Markant has been reconstructed. The reappearance of this long-lost manuscript signed and dated by colophon and with portraits and coats of arms of the donors, husband and wife, prompts a reconsideration of the artist and his place in the evolution of manuscript illumination. Signed and dated Books of Hours are rare. [BOH 59] $ 140,000 6. FRANCISCAN BOOK OF HOURS (Use of Rome) In Latin, illuminated manuscript on parchment Italy, Lombardy (Milan? Ferrara?), c. 1475 5 historiated initials by an anonymous artist This small and intimate Book of Hours was written and illuminated for Franciscan use. It was probably owned by a member of the Observant Franciscans, for which Bernardino of Siena was Vicar General in 1438. Known for his devotion to the Holy Name of Jesus, Bernardino devised a symbol which appears at the opening of the manuscript -- IHS, the first three letters of the name of Jesus in Greek, in Gothic letters on a blazing sun. The style of the decoration and the palette, with dark blue and magenta predominating, is typical of northern Italian artists, especially productions of Ferrara and Modena. [BOH 55] $ 55,000 6 7. LE BIGOT HOURS (Use of Rome) In Latin, illuminated manuscript on parchment France, Tours or Le Mans, late 1470s-c. 1480 12 miniatures (7 in camaïeu d'or) by Jean Bourdichon and possibly a related artist This exquisite small manuscript, a twin to a Book on Hours in the Comites Latentes Collection, includes 12 miniatures, of which 7 are in camaïeu d'or. Nicholas Herman securely attributes the 5 opening miniatures to the young Jean Bourdichon, painter to four kings of France and direct disciple of the celebrated Jean Fouquet (died 1480). The camaïeu d'or miniatures once ascribed to Fouquet are now given by Herman to an artist who if “not Bourdichon, he was undoubtedly an apprentice.” The manuscript was copied by the Parisian scribe Jean Dubrueil, along with seven other manuscripts by Jean Fouquet, Jean Bourdichon, and the Maître François. A French Renaissance “Fanfare” binding for the couple Francois le Bigot and Perrette d’Amours completes the delightful ensemble. [BOH 17] $ 325,000 7 8. BOOK OF HOURS (Use of Rouen) In Latin and French, illuminated manuscript on parchment France, Rouen, c. 1470-1480 13 miniatures by the Master of the Echévinage de Rouen This Book of Hours is a fine example of Rouen manuscript production in the last quarter of the fifteenth century. Its liturgical use for both the Hours of the Virgin and the Office of the Dead, along with its style of illumination, confirm Rouen as its place of origin. The Master of the Echévinage de Rouen must have overseen a large workshop circa 1460 to 1480, with his principal patrons including the city aldermen (Echévins) of Rouen, after whom he takes his name. The present manuscript contains thirteen skillfully-executed large, arch-topped miniatures in his hand and is textually complete. [BOH 95] $ 150,000 9. CALENDAR FROM A BOOK OF HOURS (Use of Rouen) In Latin and French, illuminated manuscript on parchment France, Rouen, c. 1500 12 miniatures by the Master of Amboise le Veneur This substantial fragment of a Book of Hours must come from an unusually grand copy, one that included not only a fully illuminated calendar but also bracket borders for most of the text pages. The style of the charming calendar – illustrating the Labors of the Month and the Signs of the Zodiac – is consistent with that of the illuminator known as the Master of the Missal of Ambroise Le Veneur, identified and studied by Isabelle Delaunay and named after a grand Missal painted for the Bishop of Evreux. His style was strongly influenced by that of the leading Rouen illuminator of his day, Robert Boyvin, known from surviving accounts for the Palace of the Archbishops in Rouen and patronized by Georges d’Amboise. [BOH 89] $ 38,000 8 10. BOOK OF HOURS (Use of Rome) In Latin and French, illuminated on parchment Paris, Guillaume Le Rouge (active in Paris 1493-1517), c. 1510 17 miniatures by the Master of the Paris Entries; 41 large metalcuts, 5 small metalcuts, after designs by the Master of the Petites Heures of Anne de Bretagne (Master of the Apocalypse Rose), hand-painted. These elegant Horae combine imprint and manuscript, likely supplying in manuscript form what was missing from the imprint or perhaps attempting to personalize the copy. The miniatures are painted by the Master of the Paris Entries (alias Jean Coene IV), a prolific artist active until the 1530s, who provided paintings for manuscripts and printed books of hours. He is named after the manuscripts painted for the royal entries of Mary Tudor (1514) and Claude de France (1517). The remaining illustrations are engravings from the small octavo series cut for the printer Guillaume Le Rouge and compositions provided by the Master of the Petites $ 50,000 Heures d’Anne de Bretagne for Thielman Kerver and Georg Wolff (Paris, 1497). [BOH 92] 11. BOOK OF HOURS (Use of Geert Grote) In Dutch, illuminated manuscript on parchment Eastern Netherlands, probably Zwolle, c. 1470-1480 1 full page miniature and 3 historiated initials by the Masters of the Zwolle Bible This charming Book of Hours is illuminated by the Masters of the Zwolle Bible, perhaps under the supervision of the Brethren of the Common Life at Zwolle in the Gregoriushuis. The Masters of the Zwolle Bible are a group of artists identified from their production of a sumptuous six-volume Bible for the Community of the Brethren of the Common Life in Zwolle, between 1462 and 1476, which was described in the 1989 exhibition as “finely decorated but never excessively or exaggeratedly opulent … [the] colors are kept pale, and the illumination has a quality of extreme lightness.” It was most probably made for a resident of Utrecht, the “Tho[mas] Joffe,” whose late fifteenth-century ex-libris in Dutch is visible with UV light on the last leaf. [BOH 94]. $ 75,000 9 12. THE FRANCOISE FORTIN HOURS (Use of Amiens?) In Latin and French, illuminated manuscript on parchment France, Rouen, c. 1480 11 large miniatures by an artist related to the Master of the Echévinage de Rouen Here is a highly personalized large-format Book of Hours that has many remarkable textual and pictorial features. It was certainly made for a woman, for the text was clearly adapted to her, including not only prayers in the feminine case but the interpolation of the Suffrage for St. Margaret, patron saint of childbirth, within the Hours of the Virgin. The fine miniatures are accompanied by numerous marginal motifs of great charm and imagination – children’s games, everyday genre scenes, a young girl with a unicorn (the owner?), and so forth. The first owner, probably Françoise Fortin, was proud of her possession, for she signed the book in many places, even promising a reward for its return, if lost. [BOH 99] $ 140,000 10 13. BOOK OF HOURS (Use of Rome) In Latin and French, illuminated manuscript on parchment Southern Netherlands, Bruges, c. 1490-1505 14 full-page miniatures, 1 historiated initial and 12 calendar miniatures with full borders by the Master of the David Scenes of the Grimani Breviary and workshop A previously unknown, early work by an important Ghent-Bruges artist, the Master of the David Scenes, whose early masterpiece is the Hours of Joanna of Castille in the British Library. Named for the unusual narrative miniatures of the life of David in the Grimani Breviary, the illuminator has an extensive oeuvre and was responsible mostly for small Books of Hours and Prayerbooks that were influenced by Simon Marmion (for the half-length figures), Hans Memling, and Gerard David. The artist collaborated in the last half of his career with the Master of James IV of Scotland and at least once with Simon Bening. Complete, in pristine condition, and extensively illuminated, the present work – unpublished, not at auction, and from a private North American Collection – fits neatly within a small group of manuscripts dated early in his career contemporary with the Hours of Joanna of Castille. POR 11 14 . BOOK OF HOURS [OF GUILLAUME BRAQUE?] (Use of Cambrai) In Latin and French, illuminated manuscript on parchment France, Valenciennes, c. 1475-1480 1 large and 14 small miniatures by the Workshop of Simon Marmion This made-to-order Book of Hours offers an excellent witness to the atelier of the painter-illuminator Simon Marmion, called in his day the “prince of illumination.” Marc Gil has attributed the manuscript to a member of his workshop who worked side-by-side with the master in the later 1470s. Little is known of the workshop of Marmion so this Hours emerges as a key work for this inquiry. New research by Gregory Clark suggests that it was written for the monastery of Saint-Jean-Baptiste de Valenciennes, where Guillaume Braque was abbot (and perhaps patron of the present work). [BOH 14] $ 120,000 15. BOOK OF HOURS (Use of Paris) In Latin and French, illuminated manuscript on parchment France, Paris, c. 1500 12 large and 16 small miniatures by the Master of Jean d’Albret, the Master of Liénart Baronet, and the Master of Etienne Poncher These Horae and its miniatures are the fruit of collaboration by three distinct artists, all working at the end of the century in Paris. Inserted before the calendar, there is a rare added sequence of prayers to protect against ailments and danger, and to help women achieve speedy child-birth. It is fittingly illustrated with a representation of presumably Saint Roch, frequently invoked to cure ailments and protect from plague. [BOH 88] $ 90,000 12 16. BOOK OF HOURS In Latin and French, illuminated manuscript on vellum France, Poitiers, c. 1480 8 large miniatures by the Master of Walters 222 (Jean Gillemer?) Fine example of the unusual Poitevin style associated with the Master of Walters 222, an artist who is perhaps identical with the artist Jean Gillemer (according to Véronique Day), whom we know from a fascinating set of trial documents. The high foreheads, expressive faces and figures, and muted palette characterize this interesting artist, who in the present miniatures (for the rare Hours of the Compassion of the Virgin) demonstrates his familiarity with the art of other centers, particularly that of Tours. This cross-fertilization is all the more interesting in the light of Jean Gillemer’s extensive travels through the region, revealed from the archival documents. [BOH 65] $ 80,000 17. PRINTED BOOK OF HOURS (Use of Rome) In Latin and French, printed on parchment Paris, Gillet Hardouyn, c. 1515 (almanac for 1515-1530) 21 large and 29 small metal engravings, after designs by Jean Pichore, all hand-colored The high-quality contemporary painting of the metalcuts in this rare imprint (two other recorded copies) is attributed to an artist in the workshop of Jean Pichore, the leading illuminator and print designer in Paris in the first decades of the sixteenth century. The large metalcuts demonstrate the movement away from the courtly Gothic heritage of the older Master of Très Petites Heures of Anne of Brittany towards more intricate, mannered forms derived from German and Netherlandish prints and influenced by Albrecht Dürer. [BOH 82] $ 90,000 13 18. BOOK OF HOURS (Use of Rome) In Latin and French, illuminated manuscript on parchment Southern Netherlands, probably Bruges, c. 1460-1465 19 large miniatures and 15 small miniatures by the workshop of Willem Vrelant, probably by the Mildmay Master With its extraordinarily well preserved and sumptuous miniature cycle including refined decorative borders for all text pages, this Book of Hours was illuminated by one of Willem Vrelant's most prolific collaborators in Bruges, the Mildmay Master. It is a harmonious piece of work, consistently executed by one hand. Stylistically, it seems to be very close to the very manuscript in Chicago (Newberry Library, MS 35) that gave the artist his name. Made around 1460 it was commissioned by a man called Johannes, who probably came from Troyes in North Eastern France or French Flanders, and is preserved in a beautiful textile binding probably from the seventeenth century. [BOH 96] $ 280,000 14 19. BOOK OF HOURS (Use of Rome) In Latin, illuminated manuscript on parchment France, Lyon, c. 1495-1510 11 full page miniatures, 1 half page miniature, and 28 small miniatures This handsome, richly illuminated Book of Hours is a good example of manuscript production in the age of print. It was painted by a prolific multi-talented artist, Guillaume II Le Roy, who was active as an illuminator at the same time that he supplied drawings and designs for illustrations for the printing industry and executed large-scale media (panel-painting and ephemeral art related to royal entries or celebrations). He was the son or nephew of the first printer established in Lyons and probably of Flemish origin. [BOH 46] $ 275,000 20. HOURS OF THE VALLOT FAMILY (Use of Rome) In Latin and French, illuminated manuscript on parchment France, Dijon, c. 1475-1490 6 full page miniatures, 14 small miniatures, and 6 historiated initials by the Master of the Burgundian Prelates (Pierre Changelet?) Manuscripts by the Master of the Burgundian Prelates are rare. All the artist’s known works confirm his activity in Burgundy and help us refine ideas about his monumental style (he was active also as a painter). This manuscript was owned in the late fifteenth century by members of the Vallot family of Dijon. The present Hours is noteworthy for its large scale, its illustrious provenance, and its clean fresh condition. Its high quality is consistent with other chef d’oeuvres by the Master, especially the Missal of Richard Chambellan (Paris, BnF, MS lat. 881). [BOH 91] $ 270,000 15 21. ALBUM FROM A BOOK OF HOURS In Latin, illuminated manuscript on parchment France, Paris or the Loire Valley, Tours, c. 1524 12 large and 6 small miniatures by an artist in the circle of Etienne Collault Composed as a picture album, this manuscript preserves the vestiges of what was surely a deluxe made-toorder Book of Hours. The style of our painter is close to Etienne Collault, a Parisian artist documented in the 1520s, working for the King and the court. It also includes an illumination by Caleb William Wing (1801-1875), called in his obituary “the best facsimile copyist of ancient illuminations.” The arms of the patron, a merchant’s mark, appear twice in the manuscript. [BOH 3] $ 80,000 22. ALBUM OF SUFFRAGES AND PRAYERS FROM A BOOK OF HOURS In Latin, illuminated manuscript on vellum Eastern France, c. 1475-1500 11 large miniatures This set of suffrages and Prayers to Christ, undoubtedly a fragment from a larger Book of Hours, contains a series of eleven charming miniatures executed in a naïve provincial style using ink wash and gouache-like pigments. Various details provide clues to localization. The suffrage to Saint Justus of Beauvais would seem to indicate a location in the Oise or at least the region of Picardy (Justus was reputedly martyred between Beauvais and Senlis, while on a journey to Amiens). The coat-of-arms held by Saint Michael is plainly that of Savoie (gules a cross argent). Saint Adrian of Nicomedia, whose cult was widespread in Northern France, holds a coat-of-arms quartered with the Ahun and Panat families, in place of his usual mallet and anvil. [BOH 64] $ 30,000 16 23. BOOK OF HOURS (Premonstratensian Use) In Latin and Dutch, illuminated manuscript on parchment Southern Netherlands, probably Antwerp, c. 1420-1430 10 miniatures and 11 historiated initials perhaps by the Masters of the Brno Speculum, a follower of the Master of Mary of Guelders The markets of Antwerp attracted producers and buyers from both northern and southern Netherlands and may have been where this Hours with its unusual mixture of northern and southern features was produced. The sequence of miniatures showing paired saints betrays all the characteristics of the so-called International Style of Pre-Eyckian painting: sinuous lines, soft drapery, translucent and bright colors. These finely painted miniatures are in a later development of the style of the Master of Mary of Guelders, showing similarities with that of the Masters of the Brno Speculum, both active in the Guelders/Utrecht region in the first decade of the fifteenth century. [BOH 98] $ 265,000 17 24. PRINTED BOOK OF HOURS (Use of Rome) In Latin and French, printed on parchment and hand-colored Paris, German Hardouyn, c. 1526 (almanach for 1526-1541) 17 large metalcuts 10 small and 16 medallions after designs by Jean Pichore and his workshop Germain Hardouin was a prolific Parisian printer, who often worked in tandem with his brother Gillet Hardouin. Together or separately, the two brothers furnished the Paris market and the provinces with a large number of impressions of printed Books of Hours, often hand-colored like this one. The metalcuts were made after designs by Jean Pichore, an illuminator and engraver in Paris at the end of the fifteenth century and are in part from the series drawn by the artist for Germain Hardouin and in part drawn from those made for another printer Guillaume Eustache. Illuminated architectural borders, entirely in manuscript, are added to every metalcut, in imitation of manuscript Horae. [BOH 60] $ 60,000 25. PRINTED BOOK OF HOURS (Use of Chartres) In Latin and French, printed on parchment Paris, Philippe Pigouchet for Simone Vostre, c. 1507 (almanac for 1507-1527) 18 large and 28 small metal cuts after designs by the Master of the Très Petites Heures of Anne of Brittany and Jean Pichore A rare 1507 edition for the Use of Chartres by Simon Vostre (only one other copy recorded), who was one of the most important Parisian printers and stationers. This imprint combines the Gothic-style prints from the 1495-1498 Octavo series by the Master of the Très Petites Heures of Anne of Brittany with those that are more Renaissance in style and were newly created for Vostre in 1504 by Jean Pichore, including numerous full-page cuts, as well as the famous Dance of Death sequence. [BOH 58] $ 30,000 18 26. BOOK OF HOURS (Use of Rome) In Latin and French, illuminated on parchment Paris, Gilles Hardouin (active in Paris, 1491-1521), c. 1509 (almanach for 1509-1524) 17 metalcuts, 3 smaller metalcuts, after designs by the Workshop of Jean Pichore, hand-painted likely in the Workshop of Hardouin Printed Book of Hours for the use of Rome, these Horae are a fine example of a Parisian printed book of hours, enhanced with period coloring. The format (octavo agenda) of these Horae is unusual, very narrow and oblong, allowing for easy use as a vademecum for private devotion. It is a rare imprint, with only two other known copies (London, BL; Tenschert and Nettekoven, III, no. 143). Gilles Hardouin was one of the great printers of first quarter of the sixteenth century, who printed sometimes with his brother Germain Hardouin (active 1500-1541). These Horae contain engravings based on designs from the workshop of Jean Pichore. [BOH93] $ 45,000 27. WOVEN PRAYER BOOK In Latin and French, woven of gray and black silk Lyon, R. P. J. Hervier, designer; J. A. Herver, manufacturer; realized for A. Roux, 1886-1887 This unorthodox Book of Prayers is machine woven of gray and black silk, using the Jacquard system of punch cards. It is evidently the only woven book ever produced, and the technique anticipates computer programming. Submitted by the city of Lyons to the Universal Exposition of 1889, the book won the “grand prix.” Its illustrative program draws widely on Italian Renaissance painting and French manuscript illumination, including manuscripts of the Duke of Berry. Approximately 30 copies are recorded mostly in European and American institutions. [BOH 84] $ 55,000 19 Keegan Goepfert | Vice-President Sandra Hindman | President L ES E NLUMINURES NEW YORK PARIS CHICAGO 23 East 73rd Street 7th Floor New York, NY 10021 tel: +1 212 717 7273 newyork@lesenluminures.com 1, rue J.J. Rousseau 75001 Paris tel: +33 (0)1 42 60 15 58 info@lesenluminures.com 2970 North Lake Shore Drive Chicago, Illinois 60657 tel: +1 773 929 5986 chicago@lesenluminures.com www.medievalbooksofhours.com www.lesenluminures.com EXHIBITION IN NEW YORK: November 7 to December 6, 2013 Open 10 AM to 6 PM, Monday to Saturday FULL DESCRIPTIONS AVAILABLE ON REQUEST Design: Karen Gennaro Printing: The Ink Spot