Thursday, September 30, 2010

Triumphal Maximiliano

"The [Holy Roman] Empire comprised a collection of diverse territories of varying size, importance and religious adherence, each ruled over by its own territorial overlord, who in turn owed allegiance to an elected Emperor.

In its basic form, the entry* was ceremonial in character, an event in which the ruler with his retinue entered officially into one of the cities of his realm and was received by the dignitaries of that city with a standard set of ceremonies of obeisance or of feudal contract.

The imperial entry had its origins in Roman, Byzantine and medieval ceremonial. Ancient ceremonial combined with classicising impermanent architecture, above all the triumphal arch, were its characteristics.

The Emperor Maximilian I (1459-1519, elected Emperor in 1508) commissioned two works of art which exerted a considerable influence on court festivals generally in the Empire: the set of 192 woodcuts commissioned from Dürer in 1515 which together make up the Triumphal Arch and the series of 136 woodcuts by Burgkmair, Altdorfer, Dürer and others which constitute the Triumphal Procession of 1517."

[Helen Watanabe-O'Kelly, 1999 via BL]

*or procession or triumph




Triumph of Emperor Maximilian I



Triunfo del Emperador Maximiliano I (5)



Triunfo del Emperador Maximiliano I (8)





Triunfo del Emperador Maximiliano I (10)



Triunfo del Emperador Maximiliano I (11)



Triunfo del Emperador Maximiliano I (12)



Triunfo del Emperador Maximiliano I (17)



Triunfo del Emperador Maximiliano I (32)



Triunfo del Emperador Maximiliano I (56)



Triunfo del Emperador Maximiliano I (58)




Triunfo del Emperador Maximiliano I (72a)



Triunfo del Emperador Maximiliano I (73)


Triunfo del Emperador Maximiliano I (80)


Click through to large and extra large versions :
even larger images are available from the source site, listed below.

[this is an original entry on BibliOdyssey]

"'Festival Book' is the term for accounts of festivities such as entries, of which there are many hundreds, often surviving in very few copies. Originally manuscripts, often illustrated, compiled for prince or city, with the arrival of print they were frequently published, varying in form from short pamphlets describing the order of events, and perhaps recording speeches, to lavish books illustrated with woodcuts or engravings showing the various tableaux, often including a fold-out panorama of the procession, curling to and fro across the page. [..]

These livrets are not always to be trusted as literal records; some were compiled beforehand from the plans, and others after the event from fading memories. The authors or artists engaged in producing the books had by no means always seen the entry themselves. Roy Strong finds that they are 'an idealization of an event, often quite distant from its reality as experienced by the average onlooker. One of the objects of such publications was to reinforce by means of word and image the central ideas that motivated those who conceived the programme.' [..]

The Holy Roman Emperor, Maximilian I, went a step further, creating enormous virtual triumphs that existed solely in the form of print. The Triumphs of Maximilian (begun in 1512 and unfinished at Maximilian's death in 1519) contains over 130 large woodcuts by Dürer and other artists, showing a huge procession (still in open country) culminating in the Emperor himself, mounted on a huge car."

The charming manuscript images seen above were sometimes assiduously copied from, and at other times simply inspired by, The Triumphs of Maximilian I. That the procession was itself imaginary makes the concept of embellishment more a stylistic contrast with the originals than in any sense a deviation from reality. The manuscript was produced in about 1700 (so it is claimed) and features captions in German. It may have been originally commissioned by the Hapsburg Archduke Albert of Austria (d. 1621) and ended up in Spain via his successors, Philip IV and Charles II. The manuscript artist is not known.

'Triunfo del Emperador Maximiliano I, Rey de Hungría, Dalmacia y Croacia, Archiduque de Austria' is owned by BNE and hosted by Biblioteca Digital Hispánica
[homepage].

You'll notice that the direct link to the manuscript goes via the European Library. They are host to a(n) (new) exhibition section called Reading Europe: European Culture Through the Book, that makes a 1000 books from the national libraries of Europe available in bilingual or multilingual format.



Griffin
[alternative, or, I suppose, the original, from the Graz MS]

Sunday, September 26, 2010

Icones Plantarum Rariorum

"..the ambassador of Flora itself, bringing us the treasures from foreign worlds.."
[Carl Linnaeus about his friend NJ van Jacquin]



Piper umbellatum
Piper umbellatum



Bromelia humilis
Bromelia humilis



Phyllanthus speciosa
Phyllanthus speciosa




Arum helleoborifolium
Arum helleoborifolium



Zamia integrifolia
Zamia integrifolia



Cassia sensitiva
Cassia sensitiva



Ornithogalum caudatum
Ornithogalum caudatum



Hedysarum pictum
Hedysarum pictum



Dioscorea triphylla
Dioscorea triphylla



Dracaena terminalis
Dracaena terminalis



Zamia angustifolia
Zamia angustifolia



Hedysarum vespertilionis
Hedysarum vespertilionis



Polypodium hippocrepis
Polypodium hippocrepis




Polypodium multifidum
Polypodium multifidum





Iatropha gossypifolia
Iatropha gossypifolia



Ornithogalum pyramidale
Ornithogalum pyramidale



Polyplodium trifoliatum
Polyplodium trifoliatum



Begonia dichotoma
Begonia dichotoma



Dioscorea villosa
Dioscorea villosa



Nikolaus Joseph (van) Jacquin (1727-1817) was a Dutch scientist who studied medicine, chemistry and botany in Leiden, Paris and, most notably, Vienna. As a regular visitor to the gardens at Schönbrunn Palace* in Vienna, Jacquin met the Holy Roman Emperor Francis I and was invited to accompany a botanical collecting voyage to the Caribbean and Central America in the 1750s.

The four year expedition gave rise to Jacquin's first botanical publication and brought him to the attention of the great Carl Linnaeus*, who became a life-long correspondent and friend of Jacquin. Linnaeus commented about that first Jacquin publication ['Enumeratio Systematica Plantarum' (1760)] on West Indian plants:
"I have seldom seen such a small booklet so rich in golden knowledge. I read it during the evening and could not sleep at night because I dreamed of your beautiful plants."
Professorships in geology, chemistry and biology at various institutions followed and a generous pension allowed Jacquin the freedom to pursue a career publishing illustrated botanical folios. These works shared Jacquin's sense of scientific fidelity in which specimens were reproduced, as we see above, without the ostentatious embellishment one often meets in 18th century botanical books.

The images displayed here were chosen because they are all over-sized fold-outs from a massive three volume series published in Vienna between 1781 and 1793. 'Icones Plantarum Rariorum' features nearly six hundred and fifty (!) hand-coloured engravings that had begun life as a supplement to earlier releases on Viennese and Austrian botany.

Although Jacquin was an accomplished scientific illustrator himself, other duties meant that his detailed and precise instructions were carried out by hired artists: the Bauer brothers, Joseph Scharf and Joseph Hofbauer. The plate quality varies at times, but the vast majority of the illustration work is excellent. I would happily put this at the top of my 18th century florilegium Christmas shopping list.

The three volumes of 'Icones Plantarum Rariorum' are available from the Botanicus website. The list of illustrated species can be more easily seen at the old Missouri Botanical Gardens sites: volumes ONE, TWO & THREE.

Jacquin biographies: Botanicus, Wikipedia.

Jacquin previously: Fragmenta Botanica [and]. And in general: flora.

{I will be adding a further selection of images to the flickr set later this week [DONE!]}


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Monday, September 20, 2010

Locomotive Drawings

The William Halsey Locomotive Drawing Collection



Brandt Loco. Works, Buffalo Div, Hornellsville, 1875
Brandt Loco. Works, Buffalo Div, Hornellsville, 1875; Erie Railway; Locomotive 409, cab and tender painted black with green and gold detailing, 409 painted in green and gold on tender, 4-4-0 wheel configuration, watermark: Keuffel & Esser Co.



Brooks Loco. Works, Buffalo Div, Hornellsville, 1873
Brooks Loco. Works, Buffalo Div, Hornellsville, 1873; Erie Railway; Locomotive 400, cab and tender painted dark red with red and gold detailing, 400 painted into motif on the side of tender, 4-4-0 wheel configuration, Jany. 1873, Buffalo Division written in lower left corner, slight foxing of print



Delaware Div, Rogers Loco. Works, Susquehanna, PA 1875
Delaware Div, Rogers Loco. Works, Susquehanna, PA 1875; Erie Railway; Locomotive 319, cab and tender painted dark red with blue, green, red and gold detailing, 319 painted in red and gold on tender, 4-4-0 wheel configuration, 1875 written in bottom right corner (period or later?)


Dunkirk Shop, Buffalo Shop, Hornellsville 1866
Dunkirk Shop, Buffalo Shop, Hornellsville 1866; Erie Railway; Locomotive 69, cab and tender painted dark red with red, yellow, gold and green detailing on the engine, Erie Railway painted in gold on the tender with a motif painted in the center, 4-4-0 wheel configuration, watermark: Keuffel & Esser Co. Universal



Rogers Loco. Works, Delaware Div, Port Jervis, NY 1866
Rogers Loco. Works, Delaware Div, Port Jervis, NY 1866; Erie Railway; Locomotive 195, cab and tender painted dark red with red and gold detailing, 195 painted in gold on the tender, 4-4-0 wheel configuration



Rogers Loco. Works, Delaware Div, Susquehanna, PA 1875
Rogers Loco. Works, Delaware Div, Susquehanna, PA 1875; Erie Railway; Locomotive 104, cab and tender painted black with red, yellow and gold detailing, 104 painted in gold on the tender, 4-4-0 wheel configuration, watermark: J WHATMAN 1897



Swinburne Loco. Works, Eastern Div, Jersey City, NJ 1866
Swinburne Loco. Works, Eastern Div, Jersey City, NJ 1866; Erie Railway; Locomotive 242, cab and tender painted dark brown with yellow, red, green and gold detailing, 242 painted in red and gold on tender, 4-4-0 wheel configuration



Wilmarth Loco. Works, Delaware Div, Susquehanna, PA 1868
Wilmarth Loco. Works, Delaware Div, Susquehanna, PA 1868; Erie Railway; Locomotive 183, cab and tender painted dark red with red, yellow and gold detailing, 183 painted in red and gold on tender, 4-4-0 wheel configuration



Wilmarth Loco. Works, Eastern Div, Jersey City, NJ 1866
Wilmarth Loco. Works, Eastern Div, Jersey City, NJ 1866; Erie Railway; Locomotive 175, cab and tender painted dark brown with red blue and gold detailing, 175 painted in red and gold on tender, 4-4-0 wheel configuration, watermark: Keuffel & Esser Co.
"The William Halsey Locomotive Drawing Collection contains 84 watercolor drawings by William Halsey (born ca. 1845- died ca. 1900), a railroad enthusiast probably working in the New York region as early as 1863 until the 1890s. [..]

A significant aspect of the drawings is the record of colors and paint schemes used at the time. Some of these drawings represent the only records of this form of applied decorative railroad art to survive. As a group, the engines display a wide range of colors, and frequently display schemes indicative of locomotive builders or the shop’s style that maintained them."

The William Halsey Locomotive Drawing Collection is available from Southern Methodist University in Dallas
.

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Ottheinrich Miniatures

Ottheinrich Bible
(15th-16th century : Bavaria)







































15th century Bavarian illuminated manuscript bible



illuminated bible manuscript

You will be doing yourself a favour if you click through to the enlarged versions.


Regarded as one of the finest of all illuminated manuscripts in existence, the Ottheinrich Bible was thought to have been commissioned in about 1425 by the Royal Court of Bavaria. The unusually large manuscript was not completed until the following century when the German painter and engraver, Mathis Gerung, was offered 60 Rhenish guilders and winter clothes to decorate the text (the employment contract survives to this day).

The Bible carries the name of the benefactor who supported its completion. Ottheinrich (1502-1559) was the Prince of Neuburg, Elector Palatine, soldier, pilgrim, reformer, art patron (and adopted patron of BibliOdyssey), and the first unambiguously documented owner of the Bible.

The enormous book in the German vernacular language (and that only covers the New Testament) was eventually divided in the 19th century and bound into eight manuscripts which had a partially separated journey over the next century and a half. It was only about two years ago that all volumes were reunited when the privately owned sections were purchased by the Bavarian State Library in Munich (noted).
"Dr Christopher de Hamel, Consultant to the Western Manuscripts department at Sotheby’s [pdf], comments: “In the census of the hundred greatest illuminated manuscripts, European or Oriental, the present example is the only one ever likely to appear on the market. Conceived as the first illuminated bible and on an Imperial scale, it is one of the most profusely illustrated medieval bibles in existence. It is probably the last remaining manuscript in private hands from the incomparable Palatine Library, one of the greatest art collections ever formed. The manuscript has not changed hands except by descent since 1632, and in addition, it is one of the best documented manuscripts in the world, which gives it an academic importance beyond equal."
[In relation to the five volumes sold at auction [pdf] in 2007]:
"written by a single scribe in dark brown ink in a very fine large gothic liturgical hand, opening words of books in larger script, headings in red, capitals touched in red, small capitals and paragraph-marks in red, TWO HUNDRED LARGE ILLUMINATED INITIALS, mostly 5 lines high in a variety of renaissance designs on coloured panels with delicate tracery in liquid gold, EIGHTY-SIX LARGE MINIATURES up to full-page in size, eighty-three of them the width of two columns and mostly about quarter- to half-page in size, three of the miniatures column-width, all finely executed in full colours and liquid gold, a few original flaws in the vellum, some occasional rubbing and abrasion of miniatures.."

All the images above -- in random order -- are cropped from the full manuscript page and some more images (including full page examples) are available in the flickr set. The set of miniatures available from wikimedia appears to be either older scans or come from the 2002 facsimile publication.