Hidden Treasures: Illuminated Manuscripts from Midwestern Collections | Page 10

Materials and Techniques of the Medieval Illuminator Franciscan Antiphonary fig 13: Book of Hours, Sarum Use, Netherlandish, made for the English market, ca. 1465–1470, Ink, tempera, and gold on parchment, Underwood Prayer Book Collection at Nashotah House Book of Hours This Book of Hours was never finished, leaving blank the arched spaces intended for narrative scenes to mark the principal sections. The full border and illuminated initial ‘D’ containing a blue fleur-de-lis begins the text of Prime in the Hours of the Virgin section of the book. On the page at left is a red rubric written in French “A prime”; the illustration for Prime in the standard cycle of miniatures would have been the Nativity. Italian, 15th century Ink and tempera on parchment Department of Special Collections, Memorial Library, University of Wisconsin–Madison, MS 441, fols. 64v–65 This volume of the Antiphonary contains feasts of the Franciscan Order, namely St. Francis, St. Clare, and St. Louis of Toulouse, indicating that it was made for a house of mendicant friars or nuns. The text and square musical notation were used for singing the antiphon of the Vigil of the Feast of St. Francis, “Franciscus vir catholicus et totus apostolicus [Francis, a catholic and totally apostolic man].” Choir books required a significant expenditure of whole animal skins for each large folio. Pattern Book, dated August 1, 1450 Guiniforte da Vimercate Italian (Ferrara), documented 1449–1450 Tempera on parchment Courtesy, the Lilly Library, Indiana University, Bloomington, Ricketts 240, fols. 3v–4 fig 14: Miniature of David Confronting Abner, German(?), early 16th century, tempera and gold on parchment, Michigan State University, Kresge Museum of Art, MSU purchase, 67.14 This rare specimen of an alphabet pattern book is signed and dated by the Lombard illuminator Guiniforte of Vimercate who is documented in Ferrara in the late 1440s. A second illuminator signs his name, “Basilius de Gallis,” in the initial on folio 16 verso. A third anonymous artist adds at a later date some examples of painted borders toward the end of the manuscript. French (possibly Autun), ca. 1450 Ink, tempera, and gold on parchment Department of Special Collections, Memorial Library, University of Wisconsin–Madison, MS 161, fols. 59v–60 Miniature of David Confronting Abner German(?), early 16th century Tempera and gold on parchment Michigan State University, Kresge Museum of Art, MSU purchase, 67.14 The narrative moment depicted in this miniature is based on a passage in the Hebrew Bible, 1 Samuel 26:14, in which King David has ascended to the top of the hill and calls down to Abner who looks out from behind the tent where Saul sleeps. The artist depicts the military encampment with an archaeological interest in antiquity. The foreshortening of sleeping soldiers indicates the Renaissance interest in perspective, but the style of figure and landscape points to a northern, possibly German, illuminator. The back of this miniature is blank and unruled, suggesting it was created as an independent work of art not intended for a book. fig 14