ILLUMINATION, in Art

in art, decoration of manuscripts and books with colored, gilded pictures, often referred to as miniatures (see miniature painting); historiated and decorated initials; and ornamental border designs.

Early Illumination

The earliest known illustrated rolls come from Egypt; they include the oldest example, the Ramesseum Papyrus (c.1980 b.c.) and fragments from the Book of the Dead, found in tombs. Little or nothing survives of ancient Greek illumination, although scientific treatises and epic poetry are said to have contained pictures. It is thought that by the 2d cent. a.d. the long papyrus roll began to be replaced by the parchment codex (or leaved book). Thus a new, compact format was introduced as the framework for the picture. From the late classical period (probably 5th cent. a.d.) come the illustrations of Vergil (Vatican) and the Iliad (Ambrosian Library, Milan).

Illumination in Early Christendom

Most illuminations of the early Christian period, whose style was based on Hellenistic prototypes, are preserved only in medieval copies made in monasteries. Sumptuous Byzantine codices of the 6th and 7th cent., such as the Vienna Genesis, also show the adaptation of antique models to biblical subject matter.

In the 7th and 8th cent. the work of the Irish, Anglo-Saxons, Franks, and Lombards displayed rich decorative geometric designs with intricate human and animal interlacing, largely concentrated in initials and title pages. Among the masterpieces of Hiberno-Saxon illumination are the Book of Durrow, the Book of Kells (both: Trinity College Library, Dublin), and the Lindisfarne Gospels (British Mus.).

The chief works of the Carolingian period date from the beginning of the 9th cent. and were created for the court of Charlemagne, whose aim was to revive the art of antiquity. The existence of several local monastic schools led to a variety of styles; prominent were the Ada group, characterized by splendid coloring and figures full of movement and expression, e.g., The Gospel Book of Ada (Municipal Library, Trier), and the Reims school, known for vibrant pen drawings with little color, e.g., the Utrecht Psalter (9th cent.; University Library, Utrecht).

Works of the Reims school greatly influenced the English school of Winchester in the 10th and 11th cent. The Benedictional of St. Aethelwold (c.980) typifies this style, with sketchy drawings of elongated figures in fluttering drapery, enriched by foliated borders. Contemporary with the flowering of the Winchester school was the Ottonian renascence in Germany. Germanic illuminators used thick, luxurious colors with vigorous outlines and dynamic movement. Reichenau, Hildesheim, and Fulda were prominent centers of Ottonian art.

In Byzantine miniatures a more classical mode continued into the 13th cent. in such works as the Joshua Roll (10th cent.; Vatican), along with images of a hieratic austerity. Italy was important for the diffusion of the Byzantine style; the most original works are the Exultet rolls (Pisa), containing joyous hymns. Byzantine work declined after the capture of Constantinople in 1204.

In Spain, where there was a mixture of Christian and Arabic elements, a highly inventive work was the Commentary of Beatus on the Apocalypse (a 10th-century copy is in the Pierpont Morgan Library, New York City). The illumination of large books, Bibles and psalters, was fashionable in the Romanesque era. Richly decorated initials graced these books and, in the early 12th cent., stylized figures enhanced by complex garments and gestures were plentiful. Characteristic of mid-12th-century work is the Winchester Bible.

Before the 14th cent. illuminated manuscripts in the West were nearly always made of vellum. Both ink outline and full-color drawings were common. The color medium was usually tempera, and the gilt was burnished to a high luster. Lavish illumination was most commonly applied to religious books, including early gospels, fashioned for rich patrons, then psalters and books of hours. A few other sorts of manuscripts, such as the bestiary, were, by tradition, profusely illustrated.

The Golden Age of Illumination

Paris was the birthplace of new ideas in book ornamentation at the beginning of the 13th cent. Picture and text were more closely integrated. The most striking quality of the Gothic miniatures was their parallel to stained glass windows in the use of similar colors, drawing, and medallion frameworks. Book size decreased, initials were expanded, and grotesque little monsters and drolleries appeared in the margins.

Lay schools emerged in the 14th cent., directed by individual artists, such as Maître Honoré and Jean Pucelle. Gold fields were replaced by colored and landscape backgrounds, although colors were sometimes abandoned for grisaille, as in the Hours of Jeanne d'Evreux (c.1325; Metropolitan Mus.) by Jean Pucelle.

Greater realism and a wealth of ornament in the margins can be seen in the works done in the early 15th cent. for the duc de Berry by the Burgundian court artists André Beauneveu, Jacquemart de Hesdin, and the Limbourg brothers. The epitome of elegance was reached in the Très riches heures du duc de Berry (Chantilly) by the Limbourg brothers, showing a fusion of the refined Parisian style with the more realistic art of Flanders and also the influence of Italian panel painting.

Other notable works of the 15th cent. include the Hours of Catherine of Cleves (c.1428–45; Morgan Library) and illuminations of the Master of Mary of Burgundy (Bodleian, Oxford). The Boucicaut Master also made notable contributions. From the region of Tours came the highly accomplished Hours of Étienne Chevalier (Chantilly) by Jean Fouquet and the work of his pupil Jean Bourdichon. In England the early 14th-century art of illumination was nearly indistinguishable from that of France, e.g. Queen Mary's Psalter (British Mus.).

Italy was an important center of illumination in the 15th and 16th cent. Among those who worked as illuminators were Fra Angelico, Mantegna (briefly), Liberale da Verona, and Giulio Clovio. In general, illuminations were no longer closely related to the text but became little paintings in Renaissance frames. The decline of the art of the miniature was made inevitable by the invention of the printing press, and toward the end of the 15th cent. wood-block prints began to replace painted illumination.

Illumination in the Middle East and India

For information on the art of illumination in the Middle East and in India see Persian art and architecture; Islamic art and architecture; Mughal art and architecture; Indian art and architecture.

Bibliography

Since the mid-1960s many illuminated books have been published in relatively inexpensive facsimile editions. See S. Mitchell, Medieval Manuscript Painting (1965); D. Diringer, The Illuminated Book (rev. ed. 1967); D. M. Robb, The Art of the Illuminated Manuscript (1972); O. Pacht, Book Illumination in the Middle Ages (1987); J. J. G. Alexander, The Painted Page (1995).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Illumination in Art  - 14554 results

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DICTIONARY OF SUBJECTS AND SYMBOLS IN ART JAMES HALL Dictionary of Subjects and Symbols in Art Revised Edition INTRODUCTION BY...DICTIONARY OF SUBJECTS AND SYMBOLS IN ART, REVISED EDITION. Copyright 1974...
REALISM REALISM A STUDY IN ART AND THOUGHT BY ARTHUR McDOWALL...English, to discover the theory of realism in art, and its connexion--if it has any--with...Realism --The Romantic Spirit--Realistic Art in the Nineteenth Century--Revival of...
...1956 . From Frank Kelly Freas: The Art of Science Fiction , published by The...Dickson Batten, "The Lambton Worm." In More English Fairy Tales London...inspiration and style that ranged from Medieval illumination to Rococo decoration to, in Beardsleys...
...and in Health Disease as Metaphor in Art and Popular Wisdom Edited by Laurinda...and in health : disease as metaphor in art and popular wisdom / edited by Laurinda...art. 2. Art and society. 3. Symbolism in art. I. Dixon, Laurinda S. II. Weisberg...
...Sincerity in Art 171 Woman in the Italian Novel 197...the haunts of men, engaged in study or the illumination of manuscripts, or in gluttony and idleness...
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...Creative Process in Psychotherapy The...collection, incubation, illumination, and verification...the Creative Cycle in Psychotherapy: Illumination Via Activity-Dependent...Rossi, E. (2004a). Art, beauty and truth...and brain growth in psychotherapy. Annals...
...interface is a venue of illumination, and especially in these Venetian scapes...National Gallery of Art, Washington, D...Paters observation (in his essay on...Giorgione") that "all art constantly aspires...clear analogues in the art of the period. In...
...Breviers und seiner Illumination (Wiesbaden: Reichert...hand, it offers, in the manner of...attention to matters art-historical than...and finally, in great detail, the style of its illumination, the likely origins...attribution of the illumination to the same group...the Weltchronik in St. Gallen (Kantonsbibliothek...
...100.) In Pinsons survey of the witch in art there are many Greco-Roman examples but witches are conspicuous by their absense in the medieval period. Russell says the...1489 (Harrison, 22), and the manuscript illumination of Waldensians worshipping the devil reproduced...
...texts" provide interesting examples of the illumination of both discussions about aesthetic political...of historical montage can be examined in terms of contemporary aesthetic and political...out that mimetic representation, both in art and in politics, emphasizes "identificatory...
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...a realm of divine illumination. In the late twelfth...emergence of Gothic art. Church sculpture...intricate manuscript illumination. The innovators were...first artists to work in a sophisticated form...assiduous exponent of art as a mirror of nature...
...was painted over 3,000 years ago. The manuscript illumination (illustration) was painted in a handwritten book (manuscript) of a sea battle...city and life on its waterways. THE CLIP SAVE ART PRINT FORMAT Each Art Print and related text continues...
...architecture, stained glass, gargoyles, illuminations, paintings, sculptures and other artifacts of the period. The information presented in this setting gave the students a sense...assessment project. Sharon Victor is an art teacher at the Tamanend Middle School...
...resembles a zoom-in detail from...money. Their art was, like...most Flemish illuminations remain attributable...master of the art of illumination in all Europe...those produced in any other...canvas, Flemish illumination was an art of the court...
...calligraphy is, literally, a blinding piece of art. The more complex pieces have accompanying...eloquent image is of David routing Goliath in single combat with a reinforcing inscription...is the essence of satori, the moment of illumination when a mundane event unveils profound...
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The lyrical art of illumination: Gallerys manuscripts...Vanaman Back in the Middle Ages, before...form. The Walters Art Gallery in Baltimore currently...GO WHAT: "Music in Manuscripts" WHERE: Walters Art Gallery, 600 N. Charles...
...the history of Islamic Art, it is clear the money...birth of Islamic culture in the seventh and eighth...achievement in the calligraphic illumination of the word of God contained...ruler of Bukhara; and in the simpler artefacts...to the world of Islamic art than a thorough investigation...
...initiative; a full complement of contemporary art shows at American Universitys new $48 million...Life" (Sept. 18 through Dec. 31) *"Masterpieces in Miniature: Italian Manuscript Illumination From the J. Paul Getty Museum" (Sept. 25 through...
...rather than answers. And those in search of further illumination will find little help in her biographical details. While popular with other...artists and with her students at Wimbledon School of Art, Clough remained obsessively secretive and the...
...These lights wont usually give off much illumination and are purely for decoration. #Task lighting: Bright lighting in a specific area of the bathroom, kitchen...lighting or spotlights angled at plants or art objects. Many people make the mistake...
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encyclopedia articles on: Illumination in Art  - 33 results

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ILLUMINATION , in art in art, decoration...pupil Jean Bourdichon. In England the early 14th-century art of illumination was nearly indistinguishable...For information on the art of illumination in the Middle East and in...
...to designate gods and heroes and appeared in Christian art in the 5th cent. Although usually a circle or disk, the...When nimbus and aureole are combined for one figure, the illumination is called a glory. An almond-shaped glory is a mandorla...
MANUSCRIPT ILLUMINATION see illumination , in art. ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
...expressiveness found in French Gothic art. Other Gothic Arts Monumental fresco painting was rare in the Gothic period except in Italy, where...aspect of Gothic painting was manuscript illumination , in which text and pictures formed a...
...of illuminated manuscripts, which by the 10th cent. show a considerable skill in the French Carolingian fashion (see illumination ). The high development of this art form influenced the growth of English sculpture, which abounds in fantasies...
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