Illuminated Manuscripts: Difference between revisions

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==Illuminated Manuscripts==


:; Régine Pernoud, ''Those Terrible Middle Ages! Debunking the Myths'' (San Francisco: Ignatius Press, 2000).


== Calligraphy ==
:: One ornamented letter is enough to reveal what artistic creation could be in the Romanesque period.  Let us not even speak of those that recount, for instance, an entire biblical or historical scene.  A quite simple initial, in its essential, readable, recognizable form, is found taken up anew by every copyist, every illuminator, who made it his own and developed its inner possibilities, so to speak.  It can be almost intoxicating; one becomes a veritable maze of foliage and interlacing, another gives birth to an animal that ends in a man's face, or a man becomes a monster or angel or demon; nevertheless, the letter has not been betrayed; it remains, but ceaselessly recreated.  And this is without doubt what characterizes Romanesque art (and Gothic art as well, despite certain excesses that marked its end): respect for the essential function within a perpetual rediscovery of its inherent possibilities. (44)


== Videos ==
:: The image, the knowledge we have of the Middle Ages through architecture, sculpture, stained-glass windows, frescoes, even tapestries--"open air" documentation--represents not even a hundredth part of what we might learn from the reproduction of manuscript miniatures, if this were systematically carried out with the means of color reproduction we have available today.  It is quite surprising that in the audio-visual era nothing has yet been undertaken in this sense on the requisite scale.  A profound gap will remain in our knowledge of the Middle Ages as long as the necessary effort has not been carried out in this domain. (151)
 
===Apropos Videos===
* [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2-SpLPFaRd0 How parchment is made - BBC (4 minutes)]
* [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zuME-DcksYo Illuminations - Treasures of the Middle Ages - BBC]
* [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VBxo51GiGiU The Making Of Medieval Illuminated Manuscripts - Dr Sally Dormer]
* [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MV0FpMBxEZQ Drawings in Anglo-Saxon Manuscripts - Dr Sally Dormer]
* [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r4kwqLaqmBo Illuminated Psalter Manuscripts - Dr Sally Dormer]
 
==Calligraphy==
 
==Ecclesial Art Project==
 
* [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c8wy1H4h3rM Celtic knots]




[[Category:Środowisko]]
[[Category:Środowisko]]

Revision as of 01:00, 17 August 2014

Illuminated Manuscripts

Régine Pernoud, Those Terrible Middle Ages! Debunking the Myths (San Francisco
Ignatius Press, 2000).
One ornamented letter is enough to reveal what artistic creation could be in the Romanesque period. Let us not even speak of those that recount, for instance, an entire biblical or historical scene. A quite simple initial, in its essential, readable, recognizable form, is found taken up anew by every copyist, every illuminator, who made it his own and developed its inner possibilities, so to speak. It can be almost intoxicating; one becomes a veritable maze of foliage and interlacing, another gives birth to an animal that ends in a man's face, or a man becomes a monster or angel or demon; nevertheless, the letter has not been betrayed; it remains, but ceaselessly recreated. And this is without doubt what characterizes Romanesque art (and Gothic art as well, despite certain excesses that marked its end): respect for the essential function within a perpetual rediscovery of its inherent possibilities. (44)
The image, the knowledge we have of the Middle Ages through architecture, sculpture, stained-glass windows, frescoes, even tapestries--"open air" documentation--represents not even a hundredth part of what we might learn from the reproduction of manuscript miniatures, if this were systematically carried out with the means of color reproduction we have available today. It is quite surprising that in the audio-visual era nothing has yet been undertaken in this sense on the requisite scale. A profound gap will remain in our knowledge of the Middle Ages as long as the necessary effort has not been carried out in this domain. (151)

Apropos Videos

Calligraphy

Ecclesial Art Project