Mara:
I hope you have been able to get hold of my dissertation. As you will see, the
Douce 144 miniature borders were not a direct focus of my research. They were
a tangent that I had planned to develop in later research. Subsequently my life
and research have changed course, so it was with great interest that I received
your e-mail last week. It has been a pleasure to go back to this research from
my past, and I would be glad to share it with you. I have no plans of publishing
this material so you are welcome to use it. I am sorry that time has dimmed
some of my memories. What follows are thoughts and not completed research.
As I argued in my dissertation, I am convinced that all the miniature borders
in Douce 144 were by the same craftsman.
Some miniature borders have plain rinceaux while others are completely acanthus. The hybrid borders that contain both rinceaux and acanthus suggest that the same craftsman was responsible for the rinceaux and acanthus borders. The rinceaux found on the pages with rinceaux and hybrid borders are distinctive to the borders of the miniature pages and are not by the same craftsmen who did the remaining faces of the miniature page bifolios.. It is evident that in Douce 144 the division of labor called for this different specialist to paint just the miniature page borders.
I can confidently identify the decorator of the initials and line endings of this page to the illuminator I have identified as the A Master of the Belles Heures. This same artisan was responsible for the border and text decoration of the other surfaces of this bifolio. The A Master left the borders of the miniature page blank for the other craftsman to complete.
This same division of labor can be found in the Master of the Brussels Initials group borders. Like this latter group of manuscripts, the craftsman responsible for the miniature borders also seems to have been responsible for a good number of the miniatures in Douce 144.
The distinctive treatment of the rinceaux in Douce 144 allow me to confidently
attribute the borders of two of the copies of Jean Petit's Justification to
the same artisan: Vienna, ONB, ms 2657 and Paris, BN, fr. 5733 (the Chantilly
copy is by a different craftsman) The miniatures of the Vienna and Paris copies
are probably by the same miniaturist as found in Douce 144. As Nordenfalk and
others have argued, this same miniature style can be found in Paris copy of
Gaston Pheobus (fr. 616), although he did not do the borders as far as I can
tell.
An excellent comparison to Douce 144 can be found in another Vienna ms: ONB
1840. Especially compare the opening of Matins of the Hours of the Virgin of
these two mss. I have not seen the Vienna ms. so I am not sure about other connections
between these two books. The architectural framework of these two images of
the Annunciation suggest a possible link to the Belles Heures. Compare these
structures to that included on the miniature on folio 184v of the New York manuscript.
Another manuscript to be added to the mix is a book of hours in London, British
Library, Add. 30899.
The Terence manuscript in the Arsenal in Paris has a frontispiece whose border
is clearly by our Douce 144 craftsman (a good color plate of this frontispiece
can be found in Meiss, Limbourgs and their contemporaries, p fig. 210). Again
the style of the drolleries is close to the miniature style of the Douce 144
group. The use of gold leaf rinceaux instead of the painted rinceaux suggests
a later dating for this border.
An important aspect of the borders of Douce 144 is that, along with the Master
of the Brussels Initials borders, they represent an early appearance of acanthus
decoration in Parisian manuscript decoration. There is evidence that Douce 144
is basically contemporary with the Master of the Brussels Initials books. My
examination of the Hours of Charles the Noble in Cleveland, the British Library
Hours (Add. 29433), and the Oxford Hours suggests that they were done basically
at the same time. Some of the evidence for this is that the miniature pages
for the 7 Seven Penetential Psalms in the Oxford and Cleveland books were switched.
For some reason the Oxford bifolio ended up in the Cleveland Book. There seems
to be a scribal break on the verso of the Oxford bifolio indicating that a different
scribe was called in to make the adjustment so that the miniature originally
intended for the Cleveland book could fit into the Oxford Book. As my dissertation
argues the appearance of the two principal Belles Heures decorators in both
Add 29433 and Cleveland's Charles the Noble suggests that these were being decorated
at the same time. I argued in my dissertation that the Master of the Brussels
Initials' books should be dated about 1408-1409 thus at the same time as Douce
144: p. 102 "Both the decorative system and the collaboration of the Belles
Heures' illuminators on the bifolio in the London manuscript argue for a dating
of this work to the period when the Cloisters' book was under production. Observation
of the work of the A Master helps to clarify this dating. Incorporated into
the decoration of folio 22v of Add. 29433 are the blue and mauve fleurettes
outlined in black ink which have been noted to be characteristic of the latest
work of the A Master in the Belles Heures. This evidence suggests a date for
this work in the period around the time of the completion of the Belles Heures,
which was completed in 1409 at the latest."
All of this leads me to think that the acanthus decoration of Douce 144 and
the Master of the Brussels Initials borders influenced the Limbourgs to break
from the established decorative plan in the Belles Heures and introduce the
acanthus border around the Annunciation and apparently also around the opening
of the Gospels extracts as argued by Plummer. I know of no evidence to support
a dating of any of the Boucicaut Master borders this early. The earliest dated
manuscript to use the Boucicaut style acanthus is a Missal of St. Magloire in
the Arsenal (ms. 623) that is dated1412. The Boucicaut Hours I understand should
be dated to about this same time (say 1410-1412). As further evidence for this
dating, I would argue that there is a shift in aesthetics from the heavier painted
rinceaux to the lighter gold leaf rinceaux with painted stems. The first decade
is dominated by the painted rinceaux, and it is only with the revised decorative
plan of the Belles Heures presumably at the end of this first decade that gold
leaf rinceaux gains popularity. The Douce 144 text page borders are possibly
an important landmark in this transition. Its text page borders has the gold
leaf rinceaux with penned stems. I understand that this is a stage before the
Belles Heures. Notice how the Belles Heures borders have the sense of a complete
block of border decoration with the staffs around the three sides of the page.
Notice how the Boucicaut Hours borders do not combine painted rinceaux with
the acanthus, but uses gold leaf rinceaux with pen line stems.
This emphasizes the experimental nature of the Douce 144 borders. The heaviness and boldness of the acanthus is very distinctive. As indicated by borders like the Terence manuscript, the Douce 144 decorator will move towards the lighter aesthetic with the replacement of the painted rinceaux with the gold leaf rinceaux.
This leaves major questions. It is clear about the Italianate source for the
Master of the Brussels Initials borders, but what is the source for the Douce
144 borders? I don't have any convincing or conclusive answers, but I do have
a hunch. I wonder about a possible Germanic source for the acanthus. Acanthus
decoration can be found in German and Bohemian manuscripts, but I have not been
able to pin this down. When I was doing my research there was just not enough
known about this to develop an argument. In my e-mail a couple of weeks ago,
I threw out the possibility to identifying this Douce 144 decorator / miniaturist
with the recorded figure Haincelin of Hagenau. See the Nordenfalk article in
the Meiss festschrift for some speculations about the identity of Haincelin
(especially p. 340). Nordenfalk is intrigued with the identification of Haincelin
with the miniaturist of the the Gaston Pheobus ms (fr.616). Haincelin is also
known to have been an enlumineur en titre et valet de chambre for Louis duc
de Guyenne, the Dauphin. This suggests a possible connection to the Terence
frontispiece which was owned by the Dauphin. I know this evidence is flimsy,
but I would want to look more into potential Germanic sources for the border
decoration of Douce 144 as possible corroborating evidence. Up until now scholars
have based their arguments on assessment of miniature styles, but I think border
styles are more localizable.
Another facet that needs to be explored is the relationship of the Douce 144
borders to the Bedford Master group of mss. Is this a related artist, or is
this an early stage of the Bedford Master group? Study of the borders seem to
be a plausible way to attempt to resolve these questions.
I hope what I have presented above is helpful to your research. I realize that
much I have presented is a complicated house of cards, but even after over twenty
years, I am still convinced that more attention needs to be decorated to the
secondary decoration of manuscripts. I wish you the best of luck with your project,
and I would look forward to updates as to your progress. I certainly would be
glad to respond to any questions that you might have.
Oxford,
Bodleian Library Douce 144 |
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Folio 129: St. Michael : Suffrages. This is one of a number of miniatures that were executed by a painter associated with the Boucicaut style. The separating of individual hand from collective style is quite problematic in the Boucicaut style. The borders of the page are done by the same craftsman who did the other miniature borders and are not by the Boucicaut artist. |
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Folio 44v- Folio 45: T Master (Notice the acanthus in the upper border of folio 44v. The similarities to the miniature borders suggest that the same artist who did both).
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I have added in the table above comparisons of the Douce 144 miniatures to corresponding miniatures in Baltimore, Walters ms. 265. These comparisons have striking compositional and stylistic similarities. The borders in the Walters book are done by a separate decorator who I have found in a number of other books including: Brussels, Bibl. Roy 11140, Geneva, Bibl publ et univ, fr. 77, fol 96, Paris, BN, nouv. acq lat 3107. I have a strong suspicion that this same decorator did much of the decoration of Mazarine 406, but the resolution of the images on the website are too small to be sure. In BN fr. 172 and 173 this same decorator collaborated with a miniaturist that is probably our "youthful Bedford Master". The decorator undoubtedly left blank spaces for the drolleries. These are very close to those in the Douce 144 group. Note how the acanthus included in a number of these drolleries is connected to the Douce 144 acanthus.
Chester Beatty Leaves When intact, f. 158v is known to have had the following inscription: Factum est anno m cccc viii quo ceciderunt pontes parisiis. Virtually the same inscription appears in Douce 144. This suggests a relationship between these books in at least the work of the scribe. The Bedford and Boucicaut styles are clearly connected between these two books, but the decoration of miniature pages is strikingly different with the Chester Beatty miniatures being decorated with the traditional acanthus decoration in contrast to the innovative borders of Douce 144. |
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Coronation of the Virgin (Boucicaut Style: close to miniatures in the St. Maur Hours (Paris, BN, Nouv. acq. lat. 3107), The William Hayes Ackland Memorial Art Center (69.7.1), Chapel Hill, North Carolina. Published in Jarolsav Folda and John M. Schnorrenberg, A Medieval Treasury from Southeastern Collections, 1971, no. 40, p. 42 & 74.
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King David in Prayer opening Penitential Psalms (Bedford style: close to miniatures in Walters Art Museum, ms. 265 (see comparison to corresponding page below). The William Hayes Ackland Memorial Art Center (69.7.2), Chapel Hill, North Carolina. Published in Jarolsav Folda and John M. Schnorrenberg, A Medieval Treasury from Southeastern Collections, 1971, no. 39, p. 41 |
Manion and Vines, p. 182 give a good history of the book. The manuscript was apparently broken up when it was in the Chester Beatty collection. Three leaves were given away in June 1931 and are now in Princeton. Six were sold at Sotheby's on 22 March 1932, lots 322-327, and the remainder were sold at the Chester Beatty Sale on 24 June 10 1969. Other miniatures are in the Barber Institute, Birmingham as well as the Ackland Memorial Art Center in Chapel Hill and in a German Private collection. An additional leaf is on loan to the Herbert Johnson Museum in Ithaca, New York. |
Douce 144, fol. 63 det.
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Vienna, ONB, ms. 2657, f 1v det.
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Paris, BN, fr 5733, f. 1v det. |
London, British Library, Add. 30899, det. |
Paris, Arsenal, ms 664, folio 1v The use of gold leaf rinceaux as opposed to the painted rinceaux is probably an indication of the slightly later date of this decoration than the other manuscripts. A general trend can be seen in borders at the beginning of the second decade of the 15th century to move away from the heavier painted rinceaux to the lighter gold leaf rinceaux with ink stems. This is not an absolute rule but a general trend. |
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The table above is intended to show the similarities in the rinceaux decoration of these manuscripts demonstrating that they are in all probability by the same craftsman. No one feature is absolutely distinctive to this artisan, but collectively they reflect a unity reflective of a single hand. Note the rinceaux leaves with their pronounced splayed base; the tendrils in the pen line rinceaux have the same formation of a comma stroke followed by a couple of delicate strokes and completed by an elongated "S"" curve; gold and painted balls appear interspersed in the border; the junctures of stems in the rinceaux are frequently marked by a gold shape; and many of the same fleurettes appear in the borders of these manuscripts.
Whenever I have found this style of rinceaux decoration, it has been in the borders of miniature pages. I have not found it in the manuscripts I have examined to date on the other surfaces of the bifolios. Mazarine 406 is important here since this confirms that the border decoration of the large miniature page(s?) were treated differently from the other surfaces of the bifolios. The completed initials on the verso of this leaf are legible through the semi-transparent parchment. Mazarine 406 is useful by demonstrating that the borders and miniatures were being worked on concurrently. In other unfinished manuscripts I have seen it is more regular to see the decoration and painting of miniatures as discrete stages. An excellent demonstration of this is presented by the unfinished portions of the Salisbury Breviary. The concurrent production of the borders and miniature on the frontispiece of Maz 406 suggests that the same craftsman was responsible for both.
This style of rinceaux decoration is also important in that it enables us to identify this traditional decoration with the extravagant acanthus decoration. In Douce 144 you very evidently have a mix of types of border decoration with traditional rinceaux decoration, entirely acanthus decoration, and hybrid borders that mix the rinceaux and acanthus forms. The rinceaux style when it is found with acanthus decoration, it is found with Douce 144 type of acanthus. This allows for the identification of all these borders by a single decorator.
The rinceaux style and acanthus style is also important for helping to attribute the miniatures associated with it. It is evident in manuscripts like Douce 144, the border specialist did decorate borders for different miniaturists like the Boucicaut style miniatures. The style of drolleries found in these borders clearly link this style to the "Bedford Trend" miniature style in Douce 144. Through the appearance of the distinctive rinceaux in the borders of the Paris and Vienna copies of the Justification, it is plausible to attribute the miniatures on these pages to this same miniaturist.
Best wishes,
Allen Farber
222 Fine Arts Center
State University of New York College at Oneonta
Oneonta. New York 13820