Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 120

The Madruzzo Hours, Use of Rome, illuminated manuscript in Latin and Italian, on …

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Zuschlagspreis:
n. a.
Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 120

The Madruzzo Hours, Use of Rome, illuminated manuscript in Latin and Italian, on …

Schätzpreis
Zuschlagspreis:
n. a.
Beschreibung:

The Madruzzo Hours, Use of Rome, illuminated manuscript in Latin and Italian, on parchment [southern Netherlands (Bruges), c. 1480] 239 leaves (plus a paper endleaf and pastedown at each end), wanting a few single leaves, collation: i4, ii1 (of 2, wants May from Calendar), iii6, iv10, v8, vi10, vii7 (wants a singleton), viii8, ix10, x8, xi9 (a miniature perhaps on a singleton), xii9 (a miniature perhaps on a singleton), xiii9 (iv wanting), xiv9 (miniature on a singleton), xv11 (last a singleton added to complete text), xvi9 (miniature on a singleton), xvii9 (miniature on a singleton), xviii-xxv8, xxvi9 (miniature on a singleton), xxvii8, xxviii3 (but without loss to text), xxix10, xxx3 (last a blank cancel), single column of 15 lines of a fine late gothic bookhand, in the characteristically rounded form of books produced in the southern Netherlands for wealthy Italian patrons, rubrics in burgundy red, one- and 2-line initials in liquid gold on blue and burgundy grounds, occasional initials with tiny sprays of gold and coloured flowers in the margin, fifteen full-page miniatures by the Wodhull-Harberton Master within thin burgundy arch-topped frames with full borders of acanthus leaves and other foliage inhabited by birds, butterflies, snails and drollery creatures, each miniature facing a text page beginning with a large initial in blue and dark pink heightened with white penwork on brightly burnished gold grounds, thin gold bars forming text frame on three sides, and full decorated borders as before, some small scuffs and chips to paintwork, the corners of some leaves thumbed, overall good and presentable condition, 90 by 65mm., becoming loose in late sixteenth-century or early seventeenth-century embroidered binding of red velvet (worn and balding in places at spine and edges of boards) with the Madruzzo arms surmounted with a crown in appliqué and gold thread (compare the fanfare bindings on printed books made for Count Gian Federico Madruzzo, 1531-86, now in Amsterdam University Library, OTM: Band 2E9, and the British Library, c46a33), some wormholes at spine, remnants of clasp on back board, thin section of wooden edge of front board once with clasp-support broken away Provenance: 1. Evidently made for an Italian client wealthy enough to order a book from an influential artist in the grand production centre of Bruges. The Italian prayer at the end of the book reveals that the patron was a woman (“si grave peccatrice”), and she is probably the noblewoman in a gold dress, kneeling and gazing at Christ in adoration in the scene of the Raising of Lazarus. She may well have been a member of the powerful Madruzzo family, who controlled Trent in the Alto-Adige from the mid-twelfth century onwards. 2. By the late sixteenth or early seventeenth century the book had certainly passed into the hands of the Madruzzo family, and been given an embroidered binding with their arms. The most significant recorded bibliophile in the family was Count Gian Federico Madruzzo (1531-1586), on whom see G.D. Hobson, Les reliures à la fanfare, pp.44-45, and P. Culot, ‘Un bibliophile du Trentin, Gian Federico Madruzzo’, Bulletin du bibliophile, 1, 1997, but significantly his more famous relative, Cristoforo Madruzzo (1512-78), is recorded as owning a Book of Hours made in Tours in 1515 (now in Morgan Library, New York, M732, see The Last Flowering (French Paintings in Manuscripts), 1982, p. 107). Text: The volume comprises: a Calendar (fol. 1r); the Hours of the Cross (fol. 13r); the Hours of the Holy Spirit (fol. 19r); the Mass of the Virgin (fol. 25r); Readings from Passion from John (fol. 31v); the Office of the Virgin (fol. 34v); the Seven Penitential Psalms (fol. 136r), followed by a Litany; the Office of the Dead (fol. 163r); the Psalter of Jerome (fol. 208r); the Obsecro te (fol. 222v); Gradual Psalms (fol. 226v); prayer of indulgence in Italian attributed to St. Gregory (fol. 231r). Illumination: The miniatures here were painted by the Wodhul

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 120
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Beschreibung:

The Madruzzo Hours, Use of Rome, illuminated manuscript in Latin and Italian, on parchment [southern Netherlands (Bruges), c. 1480] 239 leaves (plus a paper endleaf and pastedown at each end), wanting a few single leaves, collation: i4, ii1 (of 2, wants May from Calendar), iii6, iv10, v8, vi10, vii7 (wants a singleton), viii8, ix10, x8, xi9 (a miniature perhaps on a singleton), xii9 (a miniature perhaps on a singleton), xiii9 (iv wanting), xiv9 (miniature on a singleton), xv11 (last a singleton added to complete text), xvi9 (miniature on a singleton), xvii9 (miniature on a singleton), xviii-xxv8, xxvi9 (miniature on a singleton), xxvii8, xxviii3 (but without loss to text), xxix10, xxx3 (last a blank cancel), single column of 15 lines of a fine late gothic bookhand, in the characteristically rounded form of books produced in the southern Netherlands for wealthy Italian patrons, rubrics in burgundy red, one- and 2-line initials in liquid gold on blue and burgundy grounds, occasional initials with tiny sprays of gold and coloured flowers in the margin, fifteen full-page miniatures by the Wodhull-Harberton Master within thin burgundy arch-topped frames with full borders of acanthus leaves and other foliage inhabited by birds, butterflies, snails and drollery creatures, each miniature facing a text page beginning with a large initial in blue and dark pink heightened with white penwork on brightly burnished gold grounds, thin gold bars forming text frame on three sides, and full decorated borders as before, some small scuffs and chips to paintwork, the corners of some leaves thumbed, overall good and presentable condition, 90 by 65mm., becoming loose in late sixteenth-century or early seventeenth-century embroidered binding of red velvet (worn and balding in places at spine and edges of boards) with the Madruzzo arms surmounted with a crown in appliqué and gold thread (compare the fanfare bindings on printed books made for Count Gian Federico Madruzzo, 1531-86, now in Amsterdam University Library, OTM: Band 2E9, and the British Library, c46a33), some wormholes at spine, remnants of clasp on back board, thin section of wooden edge of front board once with clasp-support broken away Provenance: 1. Evidently made for an Italian client wealthy enough to order a book from an influential artist in the grand production centre of Bruges. The Italian prayer at the end of the book reveals that the patron was a woman (“si grave peccatrice”), and she is probably the noblewoman in a gold dress, kneeling and gazing at Christ in adoration in the scene of the Raising of Lazarus. She may well have been a member of the powerful Madruzzo family, who controlled Trent in the Alto-Adige from the mid-twelfth century onwards. 2. By the late sixteenth or early seventeenth century the book had certainly passed into the hands of the Madruzzo family, and been given an embroidered binding with their arms. The most significant recorded bibliophile in the family was Count Gian Federico Madruzzo (1531-1586), on whom see G.D. Hobson, Les reliures à la fanfare, pp.44-45, and P. Culot, ‘Un bibliophile du Trentin, Gian Federico Madruzzo’, Bulletin du bibliophile, 1, 1997, but significantly his more famous relative, Cristoforo Madruzzo (1512-78), is recorded as owning a Book of Hours made in Tours in 1515 (now in Morgan Library, New York, M732, see The Last Flowering (French Paintings in Manuscripts), 1982, p. 107). Text: The volume comprises: a Calendar (fol. 1r); the Hours of the Cross (fol. 13r); the Hours of the Holy Spirit (fol. 19r); the Mass of the Virgin (fol. 25r); Readings from Passion from John (fol. 31v); the Office of the Virgin (fol. 34v); the Seven Penitential Psalms (fol. 136r), followed by a Litany; the Office of the Dead (fol. 163r); the Psalter of Jerome (fol. 208r); the Obsecro te (fol. 222v); Gradual Psalms (fol. 226v); prayer of indulgence in Italian attributed to St. Gregory (fol. 231r). Illumination: The miniatures here were painted by the Wodhul

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 120
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