Gold was usually applied to the pages in extremely thin sheets called gold leaf. The word “illuminated,” from the Latin illuminare, means “lighted up.” For a book to truly be illuminated, it had to be decorated with gold. A scribe would obtain a book to copy and painstakingly write out every word, in ink with a quill pen. The word “manuscript” from the Latin words manus (hand) and scriptus (writing) literally means “written by hand.” Before the invention of printing, copies of books had to be handwritten. Possibly The School of the Master of Mary of Burgundyexpand_more Leaf from a Book of Hours (recto and verso), late 15th century Painted Pages: Illuminated Manuscripts, 13th to 18th Centuries will be on view March 23 to in Gallery II.Idea One: What is an illuminated manuscript? Ultimately, the introduction and widespread use of the printing press, beginning in the fifteenth century, would lead to a sharp decline for this tradition of embellishing books and turning cherished texts into true works of art. The pigments that literally “illuminated” the books were made from a variety of substances: animal, vegetable, and mineral, with gold being used to show wealth and status. Once the text was filled in by the scribe, the manuscript was turned over to the illuminator for decoration and illustration. Script styles evolved over time and the origin of a manuscript can often be identified by the book hand or script used. A scribe would first write out the text using an ink-pot and a sharpened quill or reed pen. A large manuscript book might require the skins from a whole herd of cows or sheep. Typically, vellum or parchment, made from stretched, treated animal skins, was used for manuscript leaves. By the end of the period, many of the painters were women, especially in Paris.Īlthough paper was available in southern Europe as early as the twelfth century, its use did not become widespread until the late Middle Ages. Many were personalized with heraldry, portraits, and illustrations specified by the buyers who commissioned them. By the late fourteenth century, commercial scriptoria (writing centers) grew up in the large cities of Europe and the Middle East where more affordable manuscripts were duplicated by scribes or students. By the beginning of the thirteenth century, with the growth of universities in Europe, the demand for secular books increased as did the production of illuminated manuscripts. Smaller religious books like psalters and books of hours were produced for the wealthy as signs of status. Illumination was reserved for special books, such as altar Bibles used in cathedrals, as well as books commissioned by rulers for their personal use or as diplomatic gifts. In the early Middle Ages, most books were produced in monasteries for religious use. This exhibition focuses on the rich tradition of manuscript illumination in Europe and the Middle East. Many of these provide us with the only surviving examples of early painting. Surviving manuscripts, all executed using similar techniques, have been found in Europe, the Middle East, Asia, and Mesoamerica. A single manuscript created in this way would have taken months or even years to complete, making them extremely costly to produce. Illumination is the art of decorating handwritten books with gold, silver, and colored inks and paints to embellish pictures, letters, and margins. The word manuscript is taken from the Latin manu scriptus, meaning written by hand. Handwritten books, or manuscripts, existed for more than one thousand years before Gutenberg printed his first Bible. Painted Pages: Illuminated Manuscripts 13th to 18th Centuries features more than thirty works from medieval Bibles, prayer books, psalters, books of hours, choir books, missals, breviaries, and lectionaries as well as a selection of rare Hebrew and Arabic manuscripts. Painted Pages: Illuminated Manuscripts 13th to 18th Centuriesįrom the Reading Public Museum, Reading, Pennsylvania
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