Gardners Art through the Ages A Global History

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1
uscript painter presented two episodes of the story within a single
frame. In the first episode, at the left, Rebecca leaves the city of Nahor
to fetch water from the well. In the second episode, she offers water to
Eliezer and his camels, while one of them already laps water from the
well. The artist painted Nahor as a walled city seen from above, like

the cityscapes in the Santa Maria Maggiore mosaics (FIG. 11-14) and
innumerable earlier Roman representations of cities in painting
and relief sculpture. Rebecca walks to the well along the colonnaded
avenue of a Roman city. A seminude female personification of a
spring is the source of the well water. These are further reminders of

Luxury Arts 305

R


are as medieval books are, they are far more numerous than
their ancient predecessors. An important invention during
the Early Empire was the codex,which greatly aided the dissemina-
tion of manuscripts as well as their preservation. A codex is much
like a modern book, composed of separate leaves (folios) enclosed
within a cover and bound together at one side. The new format su-
perseded the long manuscript scroll (rotulus) of the Egyptians,
Greeks, Etruscans, and Romans. (The Etruscan magistrate Lars
Pulena,FIG. 9-15;the philosophers on Roman and Early Christian
sarcophagi,FIGS. 10-71and 11-6;and Christ himself in his role as
teacher,FIGS. 11-7and 11-8,all hold rotuli in their hands.) Much
more durable vellum (calfskin) and parchment (lambskin), which
provided better surfaces for painting, also replaced the compara-
tively brittle papyrusused for ancient scrolls. As a result, luxurious-
ness of ornament became increasingly typical of sacred books in
the Middle Ages, and at times the material beauty of the pages with

their illustrations overwhelms the spiritual beauty of the text. Art
historians refer to the luxurious painted books produced before
the invention of the printing press as illuminated manuscripts,from
the Latin illuminare,meaning “to adorn, ornament, or brighten.”
The oldest preserved examples (FIGS. 11-19to 11-21) date to the
fifth and sixth centuries.
Illuminated books were costly to produce and involved many
steps. Numerous artisans performed very specialized tasks, begin-
ning with the curing and cutting (and sometimes the dyeing) of the
animal skin, followed by the sketching of lines to guide the scribe
and to set aside spaces for illumination, the lettering of the text, the
addition of paintings, and finally the binding of the pages and at-
tachment of covers, buckles, and clasps. The covers could be even
more sumptuous than the book itself. Many covers survive that are
fashioned of gold and decorated with jewels, ivory carvings, and
repoussé reliefs (FIG. 16-16).

Medieval Manuscript Illumination


MATERIALS AND TECHNIQUES

11-20Rebecca and Eliezer at the well, folio 7 recto of the Vienna
Genesis,early sixth century. Tempera, gold, and silver on purple vellum,
1  –^14  91 – 4 . Österreichische Nationalbibliothek, Vienna.
This sumptuously painted book is the oldest well-preserved manuscript
containing biblical scenes. Two episodes of the Rebecca story appear in
a single setting filled with classical motifs.

11-19The old farmer of Corycus, folio 7 verso of the Vatican Vergil,
ca. 400–420. Tempera on parchment, 1^1 – 2  1 . Biblioteca Apostolica
Vaticana, Rome.
The earliest surviving painted Latin manuscript is a collection of the
poet Vergil’s works. This page includes part of the text of the Georgics
and a pastoral scene reminiscent of Roman landscape murals.

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