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Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 6

Anonymous Florentine artist Anonymous Florentine artist Book of Hours, use of Rome, in Latin, illuminated manuscript on vellum [Florence, mid-15th century]

Schätzpreis
50.000 $ - 80.000 $
Zuschlagspreis:
162.500 $
Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 6

Anonymous Florentine artist Anonymous Florentine artist Book of Hours, use of Rome, in Latin, illuminated manuscript on vellum [Florence, mid-15th century]

Schätzpreis
50.000 $ - 80.000 $
Zuschlagspreis:
162.500 $
Beschreibung:

Anonymous Florentine artist Book of Hours, use of Rome, in Latin, illuminated manuscript on vellum [Florence, mid-15th century] A quintessentially Renaissance Florentine Book of Hours written in a humanist script and with an appealing programme of illumination completed by a number of artists: the two full-page miniatures, including the rare depiction of Ptolemy among the astronomers, are close to the work of Zanobi Strozzi, while a follower of Francesco di Antonio del Chierico seems to have painted the historiated initials. 122 x 87mm. i + 232 + iii, textually complete, collation: 112+1, 2-510, 68 (of 10, lacking leaves after ff.53 and 58), 7-910, 108 (of 10, ix a cancelled blank and lacking a leaf after f.95), 11-1510, 169 (of 10, lacking a leaf after f.150), 1710, 188 (of 10, lacking leaves after ff.166 and 169), 198 (of 10, lacking leaves after ff.175 and 178), 209 (of 10 lacking leaf after f.182), 219 (of 10, lacking leaf after f.192), 2210, 238, 2412, catchwords sporadically preserved, faint modern pencil foliation (apparently omitting leaves after ff.13, 24, 37 and 58) followed here, 13 lines, ruled space: 69 x 45mm, written in a humanist minuscule, capitals alternating blue and gold throughout, over 200 two-line illuminated white-vine initials painted in full colour with marginal extensions along one side of the text, three four-line white-vine initials, 15 large (four- to seven-line) white-vine initials with full white-vine borders featuring birds and putti, five historiated initials with full inhabited white-vine borders incorporating vignettes, birds, animals and putti, two full-page miniatures, the first with a frame of gilt and liquid gold, the second with a full border of acanthus and putti bearing an open book (likely lacking 10 inserted miniatures after ff. ff.13, 24, 37, 42, 48, 162, 172, 186, 217 and 219 and 10 further leaves with miniatures after ff.53, 58, 95, 150, 166, 169, 175, 178, 182 and 192). Contemporary red velvet over wooden boards, sewn into 3 double bands, edges gilt and gauffered, old vellum pastedowns (velvet worn). Red half-morocco case, gilt title on spine. Content: Calendar ff.2-13; Hours of the Virgin, use of Rome ff.13-95: matins f.13, lauds f.24, prime f.37, terce f.43, sext f.49, none f.54, vespers f.58, compline f.68; Office of the Dead, use of Rome ff.96-150v; Long Hours of the Cross ff.151-186; Short Hours of the Cross ff.187-192; Penitential Psalms and Litany ff.193-217; Mass of the Virgin and prayers to various saints including St Laurence and a prayer ascribed to Innocent III ff.218-228. Illumination: This is an unusual Book of Hours of very high quality. It is rare for liturgical manuscripts to be written in humanistic script, especially in the mid-century, and we know of no parallels anywhere for the remarkable full-page miniature depicting Ptolemy among the astronomers, which introduces the Calendar. At least five artists worked on the manuscript, which – along with the quality of their work – suggests it was specially commissioned, though no clues survive as to the first owner. The two full-page miniatures appear to be by the same hand, although their borders are very different; the second miniature, depicting the Coronation of the Virgin (f.67v), is particularly close in style to the work of the manuscript illuminator and panel painter Zanobi Strozzi (1412-1468). Comparison with a Book of Hours painted by Strozzi for the Adimari family of Florence around 1448 (Walters Art Museum, W.767) reveals the same stoop-shouldered Virgin from our Coronation reappearing in the Adimari Annunciation miniature (cf. also D’Ancona, Miniatura e Miniatori a Firenze, 1962, pl. 40); elsewhere, the faces of the male figures, with close-set eyes and hairlines that appear to recede towards the centre of the head, are closely comparable across the two manuscripts. The illuminated borders appear to have been painted by four artists. The most accomplished is the painter of the five historiated initials

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 6
Auktion:
Datum:
23.04.2021
Auktionshaus:
Christie's
King Street, St. James's 8
London, SW1Y 6QT
Großbritannien und Nordirland
+44 (0)20 7839 9060
+44 (0)20 73892869
Beschreibung:

Anonymous Florentine artist Book of Hours, use of Rome, in Latin, illuminated manuscript on vellum [Florence, mid-15th century] A quintessentially Renaissance Florentine Book of Hours written in a humanist script and with an appealing programme of illumination completed by a number of artists: the two full-page miniatures, including the rare depiction of Ptolemy among the astronomers, are close to the work of Zanobi Strozzi, while a follower of Francesco di Antonio del Chierico seems to have painted the historiated initials. 122 x 87mm. i + 232 + iii, textually complete, collation: 112+1, 2-510, 68 (of 10, lacking leaves after ff.53 and 58), 7-910, 108 (of 10, ix a cancelled blank and lacking a leaf after f.95), 11-1510, 169 (of 10, lacking a leaf after f.150), 1710, 188 (of 10, lacking leaves after ff.166 and 169), 198 (of 10, lacking leaves after ff.175 and 178), 209 (of 10 lacking leaf after f.182), 219 (of 10, lacking leaf after f.192), 2210, 238, 2412, catchwords sporadically preserved, faint modern pencil foliation (apparently omitting leaves after ff.13, 24, 37 and 58) followed here, 13 lines, ruled space: 69 x 45mm, written in a humanist minuscule, capitals alternating blue and gold throughout, over 200 two-line illuminated white-vine initials painted in full colour with marginal extensions along one side of the text, three four-line white-vine initials, 15 large (four- to seven-line) white-vine initials with full white-vine borders featuring birds and putti, five historiated initials with full inhabited white-vine borders incorporating vignettes, birds, animals and putti, two full-page miniatures, the first with a frame of gilt and liquid gold, the second with a full border of acanthus and putti bearing an open book (likely lacking 10 inserted miniatures after ff. ff.13, 24, 37, 42, 48, 162, 172, 186, 217 and 219 and 10 further leaves with miniatures after ff.53, 58, 95, 150, 166, 169, 175, 178, 182 and 192). Contemporary red velvet over wooden boards, sewn into 3 double bands, edges gilt and gauffered, old vellum pastedowns (velvet worn). Red half-morocco case, gilt title on spine. Content: Calendar ff.2-13; Hours of the Virgin, use of Rome ff.13-95: matins f.13, lauds f.24, prime f.37, terce f.43, sext f.49, none f.54, vespers f.58, compline f.68; Office of the Dead, use of Rome ff.96-150v; Long Hours of the Cross ff.151-186; Short Hours of the Cross ff.187-192; Penitential Psalms and Litany ff.193-217; Mass of the Virgin and prayers to various saints including St Laurence and a prayer ascribed to Innocent III ff.218-228. Illumination: This is an unusual Book of Hours of very high quality. It is rare for liturgical manuscripts to be written in humanistic script, especially in the mid-century, and we know of no parallels anywhere for the remarkable full-page miniature depicting Ptolemy among the astronomers, which introduces the Calendar. At least five artists worked on the manuscript, which – along with the quality of their work – suggests it was specially commissioned, though no clues survive as to the first owner. The two full-page miniatures appear to be by the same hand, although their borders are very different; the second miniature, depicting the Coronation of the Virgin (f.67v), is particularly close in style to the work of the manuscript illuminator and panel painter Zanobi Strozzi (1412-1468). Comparison with a Book of Hours painted by Strozzi for the Adimari family of Florence around 1448 (Walters Art Museum, W.767) reveals the same stoop-shouldered Virgin from our Coronation reappearing in the Adimari Annunciation miniature (cf. also D’Ancona, Miniatura e Miniatori a Firenze, 1962, pl. 40); elsewhere, the faces of the male figures, with close-set eyes and hairlines that appear to recede towards the centre of the head, are closely comparable across the two manuscripts. The illuminated borders appear to have been painted by four artists. The most accomplished is the painter of the five historiated initials

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 6
Auktion:
Datum:
23.04.2021
Auktionshaus:
Christie's
King Street, St. James's 8
London, SW1Y 6QT
Großbritannien und Nordirland
+44 (0)20 7839 9060
+44 (0)20 73892869
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