fbpx
Wikipedia

Très Riches Heures du Duc de Berry

The Très Riches Heures du Duc de Berry (French pronunciation: ​[tʁɛ ʁiʃz‿œʁ dy dyk də beʁi]; English: The Very Rich Hours of the Duke of Berry[1]) or Très Riches Heures, is the most famous and possibly the best surviving example of manuscript illumination in the late phase of the International Gothic style. It is a book of hours: a collection of prayers to be said at the canonical hours. It was created between c. 1412 and 1416 for the extravagant royal bibliophile and patron John, Duke of Berry, by the Limbourg brothers.[2] When the three painters and their sponsor died in 1416, possibly victims of plague, the manuscript was left unfinished. It was further embellished in the 1440s by an anonymous painter, who many art historians believe was Barthélemy d'Eyck. In 1485–1489, it was brought to its present state by the painter Jean Colombe on behalf of the Duke of Savoy. Acquired by the Duc d'Aumale in 1856, the book is now MS 65 in the Musée Condé, Chantilly, France.

Page from the calendar of the Très Riches Heures showing the household of John, Duke of Berry exchanging New Year gifts. The Duke is seated at the right, in blue.
The Baptism of Saint Augustine, folio 37v
The Nativity of Jesus, folio 44v

Consisting of a total of 206 leaves of very fine quality parchment,[2] 30 cm (12 in) in height by 21.5 cm (8+12 in) in width, the manuscript contains 66 large miniatures and 65 small. The design of the book, which is long and complex, has undergone many changes and reversals. Many artists contributed to its miniatures, calligraphy, initials, and marginal decorations, but determining their precise number and identity remains a matter of debate. Painted largely by artists from the Low Countries, often using rare and costly pigments and gold,[3] and with an unusually large number of illustrations, the book is one of the most lavish late medieval illuminated manuscripts.

After three centuries in obscurity, the Très Riches Heures gained wide recognition in the late nineteenth and twentieth centuries, despite having only very limited public exposure at the Musée Condé. Its miniatures helped to shape an ideal image of the Middle Ages in the collective imagination, often being interpreted to serve political and nationalist agendas.[4] This is particularly true for the calendar images, which are the most commonly reproduced. They offer vivid representations of peasants performing agricultural work as well as aristocrats in formal attire, against a background of remarkable medieval architecture.

Historical context

The "Golden Age" of the book of hours in Europe took place from 1350 to 1480; the book of hours became popular in France around 1400 (Longnon, Cazelles and Meiss 1969). At this time many major French artists undertook manuscript illumination.

Duke of Berry

John, Duke of Berry, is the French prince for whom the Très Riches Heures was made. Berry was the third son of the future king of France, John the Good, and the brother and uncle of the next two kings. Little is known of Berry's education, but it is certain that he spent his adolescence among arts and literature (Cazelles and Rathofer 1988). The young prince lived an extravagant life, necessitating frequent loans. He commissioned many works of art, which he amassed in his Saint Chapelle mansion. Upon Berry's death in 1416, a final inventory was done on his estate that described the incomplete and unbound gatherings of the book as the "très riches heures" ("very rich[ly decorated] hours") to distinguish it from the 15 other books of hours in Berry's collection, including the Belles Heures ("beautiful hours") and Petites Heures ("little hours") (Cazelles and Rathofer 1988).

Provenance

The Très Riches Heures has changed ownership many times since its creation. The gatherings were certainly in Berry's estate on his death in 1416, but after this little is clear until 1485. A good deal is known about the lengthy and messy disposal of Berry's goods to satisfy his many creditors, which was disrupted by the insanity of the king and the Burgundian and English occupation of Paris, but there are no references to the manuscript.[5] It seems to have been in Paris for much of this period, and probably earlier; some borders suggest the style of the Parisian Bedford Master's workshop, and works from the 1410s to the 1440s by the Bedford workshop — later taken over by the Dunois Master — use border designs from other pages, suggesting that the manuscript was available for copying in Paris.[5]

 
Cover of the bound manuscript

Duke Charles I of Savoy acquired the manuscript, probably as a gift, and commissioned Jean Colombe to complete the manuscript around 1485–1489. Sixteenth-century Flemish artists imitated the figures or entire compositions found in the calendar (Cazelles and Rathofer 1988). The manuscript belonged to Margaret of Austria, Duchess of Savoy (1480–1530), Governor of the Habsburg Netherlands from 1507 to 1515 and again from 1519 to 1530.[6]

After this its history is unknown until the 18th century, when it was given its present bookbinding with the arms of the Serra family of Genoa, Italy.

It was inherited from the Serras by Baron Felix de Margherita of Turin and Milan. The French Orleanist pretender, Henri d'Orléans, Duke of Aumale, then in exile at Twickenham near London, bought it from the baron in 1856. On his return to France in 1871 Aumale placed it in his library at the Château de Chantilly, which he bequeathed to the Institut de France as the home of the Musée Condé.[7]

Recent history

 
The duc d'Aumale with a friend in his study at Chantilly

When Aumale saw the manuscript in Genoa he was able to recognize it as a commission of Berry, probably because he was familiar with a set of plates of other manuscripts of Berry published in 1834, and subsidized by the government of the duke's father, King Louis Philippe I.[8] Aumale gave the German art historian Gustav Friedrich Waagen breakfast and a private view of the manuscript at Orleans House, just in time for a 10-page account to appear in Waagen's Galleries and Cabinets of Art in Great Britain in 1857, so beginning its rise to fame.[9] He also exhibited it in 1862 to the members of the Fine Arts Club.[10]

The connection with the "très riches heures" listed in the 1416 inventory was made by Léopold Victor Delisle of the Bibliothèque nationale de France and communicated to Aumale in 1881, before being published in 1884 in the Gazette des Beaux-Arts; it has never been seriously disputed.[11] The manuscript took pride of place in a three-part article on all of Berry's manuscripts then known, and was the only one illustrated, with four plates in heliogravure.[12] However the manuscript was called the "Grandes Heures du duc de Berry" in this, a title now given to another manuscript, based on its larger page size. The name "Heures de Chantilly" was also used in the next decades.[13]

A monograph with 65 heliogravure plates was published by Paul Durrieu in 1904, to coincide with a major exhibition of French Gothic art in Paris where it was exhibited in the form of 12 plates from the Durrieu monograph, as the terms of Aumale's bequest forbade its removal from Chantilly.[14] The work became increasingly famous, and increasingly reproduced. The first colour reproductions, using the technique of photogravure, appeared in 1940 in the French art quarterly Verve. Each issue of this lavish magazine cost three hundred francs.[15] In January 1948, the very popular American photo-magazine Life published a feature with full-page reproductions of the 12 calendar scenes, at a little larger than their actual size but at very low-quality. Catering to American sensibilities of the time, the magazine censored one of the images by retouching the genitals of the peasant in the February scene.[16] The Musée Condé decided in the 1980s, somewhat controversially, to remove the manuscript completely both from public display and scholarly access, replacing it with copies of a complete modern facsimile.[17] Michael Camille argues that this completes the logic of the reception history of a work that has almost entirely become famous through reproductions of its images, with the most famous images having been seen in the original by only a very small number of people.[4]

Artists

 
The Limbourg brothers. Christ Led to Judgment, folio 143r[18]

There has been much debate regarding the identity and number of artists who contributed to the Très Riches Heures.

The Limbourg brothers

In 1884, Léopold Delisle correlated the manuscript with the description of an item in an inventory drawn up after Berry's death: "several gatherings of a very rich book of hours [très riches heures], richly historiated and illuminated, that Pol [Paul] and his brothers made".[19] Delisle's resulting attribution to Paul de Limbourg and his two brothers, Jean and Herman, "has received general acceptance and also provided the manuscript with its name."[2]

The three Limbourg brothers had originally worked under the supervision of Berry's brother, Philip the Bold, Duke of Burgundy, on a Bible Moralisée and had come to work for Berry after Philip's death. By 1411, the Limbourgs were permanent members of Berry's household (Cazelles and Rathofer 1988). It is also generally agreed that another of Berry's books of hours, the Belles Heures, completed between 1408 and 1409, can also be attributed to the brothers. It is thought that the Limbourg contribution to the Très Riches Heures was between about 1412 and their deaths in 1416. Documentation from 1416 was found indicating that Jean, followed by Paul and Herman, had died. Jean de Berry died later that year (Cazelles and Rathofer 1988). Apart from the main campaign of illumination, the text, border decorations, and gilding were most likely executed by assistants or specialists who remain unknown.

The choice of castles in the calendar is one factor in the dating of the brothers' contribution. The Château of Bicêtre, just outside Paris, was one of Berry's grandest residences, but does not appear in the calendar. It seems likely that this was because no image had been created by October 1411, when a large mob from Paris looted it and set it on fire in the Armagnac–Burgundian Civil War. However the châteaux at Dourdan (April) and Étampes (July) are both shown, although Berry lost them to the Burgundians at the end of 1411, with Étampes being badly damaged in the siege.[20]

 
Man of Sorrows, with Duke Charles I of Savoy and his wife from 1485 to 1489; folio 75r

Jean Colombe

Folio 75 of the Très Riches Heures includes Duke Charles I of Savoy and his wife. The two were married in 1485 and the Duke died in 1489, implying that it was not one of the original folios. The second painter was identified by Paul Durrieu as Jean Colombe,[21] who was paid 25 gold pieces by the Duke to complete certain canonical hours (Cazelles and Rathofer 1988).

 
The funeral of Raymond Diocrès, folio 86v

There were some miniatures which were incomplete and needed filling in, for example, the foreground figures and faces of the miniature illustrating the Office of the Dead, known as the Funeral of Raymond Diocrès.[22]

There are other subtle differences between the miniatures created by the Limbourgs and Colombe. Colombe chose to set large miniatures in frames of marble and gold columns. His faces are less delicate, with more pronounced features. He also used a very intense blue paint that is seen in the landscape of some miniatures. Colombe is worked in his own style without attempting to imitate that of the Limbourgs (Cazelles and Rathofer 1988). In folio 75 he followed the Limbourgs by including a depiction of one of his patron's castles in the Duchy of Savoy in the landscape background.

The Intermediate Painter

The "intermediate painter", also called the Master of the Shadows, as shadows are an element of his style, is often thought to be Barthélemy van Eyck (strictly the miniaturist known as the Master of René of Anjou, who is now normally identified with the documented painter Barthélemy van Eyck)[23] who would probably have been at work in the 1440s. Other scholars put his work as early as the 1420s, though there is no documentation for this.[6] At any rate, the intermediate artist is assumed to have worked on the manuscript sometime between 1416 and 1485. Evidence from the artistic style, as well as the details of costume, suggests that the Limbourgs did not paint some of the calendar miniatures. Figures in the miniatures for January, April, May, and August are dressed in styles from 1420. The figures strolling in October are dressed in a sober fashion indicative of the mid-fifteenth century. It is known that the gatherings fell into hands of King Charles VII after Berry's death, and it is assumed that the intermediate painter is associated with his court (Cazelles and Rathofer 1988).

Catherine Reynolds, in an article of 2005, approached the dating of the "intermediate painter"'s work through the borrowings from it visible in the work of other Parisian illuminators, and placed it in the late 1430s or at the start of the 1440s. This is inconveniently early for what she describes as the "generally accepted" identification with Barthélemy van Eyck, and in any case she detects a number of stylistic differences between van Eyck and the "intermediate painter."[24] Jonathan Alexander sees no stylistic need to hypothesize an intermediate painter at all.[25]

 
February, attributed to Paul Limbourg, or the "Rustic painter"

Attribution of the calendar miniatures

The artists of the calendar miniatures have been identified as follows (Cazelles and Rathofer 1988):

  • January: Jean
  • February: Paul
  • March: Paul and Colombe
  • April: Jean
  • May: Jean
  • June: Paul, Jean, Herman, and Colombe (?)
  • July: Paul
  • August: Jean
  • September: Paul and Colombe
  • October: Paul and Colombe (?)
  • November: Colombe
  • December: Paul

Pognon gives the following breakdown of the main miniatures in the Calendar, using more cautious stylistic names for the artists:[26]

  • January: the courtly painter
  • February: the rustic painter
  • March: the courtly painter (landscape) and the Master of the Shadows (figures)
  • April: the courtly painter
  • May: the courtly painter
  • June: the rustic painter
  • July: the rustic painter
  • August: the courtly painter
  • September: the rustic painter (landscape)? and the Master of the Shadows (figures)
  • October: the Master of the Shadows
  • November: Jean Colombe
  • December: the Master of the Shadows

In addition Pognon identifies the "pious painter" who painted many of the religious scenes later in the book during the initial campaign. The "courtly", "rustic" and "pious" painters would probably equate to the three Limbourg brothers, or perhaps other artists in their workshop. There are alternative analyses and divisions proposed by other specialists.

Function

A breviary consists of a number of prayers and readings in a short form, generally for use by the clergy. The book of hours is a simplified form of breviary designed for use by the laity where the prayers are intended for recital at the canonical hours of the liturgical day. Canonical hours refer to the division of day and night for the purpose of prayers. The regular rhythm of reading led to the term "book of hours".(Cazelles and Rathofer 1988)

The book of hours consists of prayers and devotional exercises, freely arranged into primary, secondary and supplementary texts. Other than the calendar at the beginning, the order is random and can be customized for the recipient or region. The Hours of the Virgin were regarded as the most important, and therefore subject to the most lavish illustration. The Très Riches Heures is rare in that it includes several miracles performed before the commencement of the passion (Cazelles and Rathofer 1988).

Calendar gallery

Fuller descriptions are available at a University of Chicago website.[3]

Technique

 
Martyrdom of Saint Mark in Alexandria, Limbourg brothers

Vellum

The parchment or vellum used in the 206 folios is fine quality calfskin. All bi-folios are complete rectangles and the edges are unblemished and therefore must have been cut from the centre of skins of sufficient size. The folios measure 30 cm in height by 21.5 cm in width, although the original size was larger as evidenced by several cuts into the miniatures. The tears and natural flaws in the vellum are infrequent and almost go unnoticed (Cazelles and Rathofer 1988).

Illustrations

The ground colors were moistened with water and thickened with either gum Arabic or tragacanth gum. Approximately ten shades are used besides white and black. The detailed work required extremely small brushes and probably a lens (Longnon, Cazelles and Meiss 1969).

Contents

The contents of the book are typical of those of a book of hours, though the quantity of illumination is extremely unusual.

  • The Calendar: Folios 1–13
A generalized calendar (not specific to any year) of church feasts and saints' days, often illuminated with representations of the Labours of the Months, is a usual part of a book of hours, but the illustrations of the months in the Très Riches Heures are exceptional and innovative in their size, and the best known element of the decoration of the manuscript.[27] Up to this point any scenes of the labours had been smaller images on the same page as the calendar text,[25] though later 15th-century calendars often adopted the Limbourg's innovation of a full-page miniature, though most had smaller pages than here. They were also unprecedented in mostly showing one of the duke's castles in the background. They are filled with details of the delights and labors of the months, from the Duke's court to his peasants, a counterpart to the prayers of the hours.[28] Each illustration is surmounted with its appropriate hemisphere showing a solar chariot, the signs and degrees of the zodiac, and numbering the days of the month and the martyrological letters for the ecclesiastic lunar calendar. Each month of the calendar is allotted an opening of two pages, on the righthand page the calendar listing notable feast days and on the left the miniature. January is the largest miniature in the calendar and includes the Duke of Berry at a New Year’s Day feast (Longnon, Cazelles and Meiss 1969).
 
September, with the Château de Saumur
Several of the miniatures depict the Duke, fields or castles he owned, and places he visited. This shows the personal function of the book of hours, as it is customized to suit the patron (Cazelles and Rathofer 1988).
The September miniature was almost certainly painted in two phases: first, the upper section with the sky and château was painted in the middle of the fifteenth century, around 1438-1442, in the time of René d’Anjou and Yolande d’Aragon; then the lower scene of grape-picking was completed by Jean Colombe from a sketch left by his predecessor. In general, artists started with the background, then painted in the characters before finishing with their faces.
In the foreground, it is grape-picking time. The woman in a white and red apron looks pregnant. Other young peasants are picking the purple bunches, while one of them is tasting the grapes. A further character holding a basket is walking towards a mule which is carrying two panniers. The grapes are being loaded either into the mules' panniers or into the vats on the cart pulled by two oxen.
In the background stands the Château de Saumur with its chimneys and weathervanes decorated with golden fleurs-de-lys. It was built by Louis II d'Anjou then given to his wife Yolande d’Aragon, the mother of King René and mother-in-law of Charles VII, over whom she had a considerable sway. The presence of this château can be explained by the important role played by Yolande in the early years of the reign of Charles VII and by how much the king enjoyed staying there. On the left, behind the enceinte, stands a clock-tower, the chimneys of the kitchens and a gate leading to a drawbridge. A horse is coming out and a woman with a basket on her head is on her way in.
In front of the château, between the vines and the moat can be seen a tilting ground surrounded by palisades, where tournaments were held.
The architectural design of the château draws the gaze up towards the dreamily poetic volutes. The towers conceal their protective nature beneath festive trappings, redolent of fabulous adventures in the forests of Arthurian legends and suggestive of the presence of God in His creation. As François Cali put it: "These extravagant towers are a dream landscape with constellations of canopies, pinnacles, gables and arrows, with their crockets fluttering against the light."
In the middle of the grape pickers, a character is showing his behind. This intentionally grotesque touch contrasts with the extraordinary elegance of the château. Jean Colombe's peasants lack the dignity they have in the other miniatures.
 
The Anatomical Zodiac Man
 
  • Anatomical Zodiac Man: Folio 14
The Anatomical Zodiac Man concludes the calendar. The twelve signs of the zodiac appear over the corresponding anatomical regions. It contains Berry's coat of arms of three fleurs-de-lis on a blue background. Such an image appears in no other book of hours, but astrology was one of Berry's interests, and several works on the subject were in Berry's library.[29] The two figures are sometimes regarded as male and (looking out at the viewer) female, but Pognon finds both "strangely hermaphrodite", and intentionally so.[30]
  • Readings from the Gospels: Folios 17–19
  • Prayers to the Virgin: Folios 22–25
  • Fall of Man: Folio 25
This part is represented in four stages within the same miniature. The Fall of Man is thought to have been by Jean de Limbourg and was to belong to a series of miniatures not originally intended for the Très Riches Heures.
  • Hours of the Virgin Matins: Folios 26–60
Illustrated with a cycle of the Life of the Virgin, with the page showing the Rest on the Flight to Egypt by Jean Colombe.[31]
  • Psalms: Folio 61–63
The illustrations for the psalms employ a literal interpretation of the text that is rare for the late medieval period (Manion 1995).
  • The Penitential Psalms: Folio 64–71
This section begins with the "Fall of the Angels", which bears a lot of similarity to a panel painting by a Sienese painter dating from 1340 to 1348, now at the Louvre (Longnon, Cazelles and Meiss 1969). The Limbourgs may have known this work. This miniature has been identified as not originally intended for the Très Riches Heures. The final opening has a double-page image of the Procession of Saint Gregory that surrounds the text columns, with depictions of the skyline of Rome.[32]
  • Hours of the Cross: Folios 75–78
In this section Christ is depicted as the Man of Sorrows, exhibiting wounds and surrounded by instruments of the passion. This is a common iconographic type in fourteenth-century manuscripts (Cazelles and Rathofer 1988).
  • Hours of the Holy Ghost: Folios 79–81
 
Pentecost, f. 79r
  • Office of the Dead: Folios 82–107
Colombe painted all the miniatures of this section, other than “Hell”, which was painted by a Limbourg brother. “Hell” is based on a description from a thirteenth-century Irish monk Tundal (Cazelles and Rathofer 1988). This miniature may not have been originally intended for the manuscript. Meiss and subsequent writers have argued that the full-page miniatures that codicological data show were inserted on single leaves were not originally designed for the Très Riches Heures (including the Anatomical Man, folio 14v; The Fall, folio 25r; the Meeting of the Magi, folio 51v; the Adoration of the Magi, folio 52r; the Presentation, folio 54v; the Fall of the Rebel Angels, folio 64v; Hell, folio 108r; the Map of Rome, folio 141v). Margaret Manion, however, has suggested that, "although the subjects are handled in an innovative manner, they fit within the context of the prayerbook and could well have been part of a developing collaborative plan."[22]
The funeral image shows a reputed incident at the funeral of Raymond Diocres, a famous Parisian preacher, when in the middle of his Requiem Mass he was said to have lifted up his coffin lid, and announced to the congregation "I have been condemned to the just judgement of God".[33]
  • Short Weekday Offices: Folios 109–140
The Presentation of the Virgin takes place in front of Bourges Cathedral, in Berry's ducal capital (Longnon, Cazelles and Meiss 1969).
  • Plan of Rome: Folio 141
  • Hour of the Passion: Folio 142–157
  • Masses for the Liturgical Year: Folios 158–204
Folio 201 depicts the martyrdom of Andrew the Apostle. The Duke of Berry was born on Saint Andrew's Day, 1340; consequently this miniature was of great importance to him (Cazelles and Rathofer 1988).

Stylistic analysis

The Limbourg brothers had artistic freedom but worked within a framework of the religious didactic manuscript. Several artistic innovations by the Limbourg brothers can be noticed in the Très Riches Heures. In the October miniature, the study of light was momentous for Western painting (Cazelles and Rathofer 1988). People were shown reflected in the water, the earliest representation of this type of reflection known thus far. Miniature scenes had new informality, with no strong framing forms at the edges. This allowed for continuity beyond the frame of view to be vividly defined. The Limbourgs developed a more naturalistic mode of representation and developed portraiture of people and surroundings. Religious figures do not inhabit free open space and courtiers are framed by vegetation. This is reminiscent of a more classical representation (Longnon, Cazelles and Meiss 1969). Some conventions used by the Limbourgs, such as a diaper background or the portrayal of night, were influenced by artists such as Taddeo Gaddi. These conventions were transformed completely into the artist's unique interpretation (Longnon, Cazelles and Meiss 1969).

Manion offers a stylistic analysis of the psalter specifically. The psalters offer a systematic program of illuminations corresponding to the individual psalms. These images are linked together, but are not in the numerical order of the psalter. This emphasizes the idea of the abbreviated psalter, where each psalm is illustrated once (Manion 1995). The miniatures are not modeled on any specific visual or literary precedence when compared with other fourteenth century psalters. The manuscript offers a literal interpretation of the words and lacks a selection of more personal prayers. This emphasizes the didactic use of the book of hours (Manion 1995).

Notes

  1. ^ Melissa Snell. "Les Très Riches Heures du Duc de Berry". ThoughtCo.com. Retrieved 14 October 2017. (literally: "the very rich hours of the duke of Berry")
  2. ^ a b c Manion 1996, p. 308.
  3. ^ a b c . Archived from the original on June 10, 2006. Retrieved 2009-01-23.; originally published at humanities.uchicago.edu.
  4. ^ a b Camille, throughout
  5. ^ a b Reynolds, 526–528
  6. ^ a b Pognon, 15
  7. ^ Camille, 72–77, 82; Pognon, 15
  8. ^ Camille, 75
  9. ^ Camille, 79–80
  10. ^ Camille, 78
  11. ^ Camille, 80–81
  12. ^ Camille, 83–84; Delisle
  13. ^ Camille, 84
  14. ^ Camille, 82, 86
  15. ^ Camille, 86–88
  16. ^ Camille, 86–90
  17. ^ Camille 1990, pp. 73–74. Note, however, that in 2008, Timothy Husband, Curator of the Department of Medieval Art at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, reported that he was allowed to examine the manuscript at the Chantilly Library for "many uninterrupted hours" (Husband 2008, p. viii).
  18. ^ Husband 2008, p. 314.
  19. ^ Item XXV in Delisle 1884, p. 106: "une layette plusieurs cayers d'unes très riches heures que faisoient Pol et ses frères, très richement historiez et enluminez". The English translation (without the bracketed explanatory additions) is from Manion 1996, p. 308.
  20. ^ Pognon, 13
  21. ^ Pognon, 10
  22. ^ a b Manion 1996, p. 309.
  23. ^ Reynolds, 532
  24. ^ Reynolds, 532–533
  25. ^ a b Alexander
  26. ^ Pognon, 12–13
  27. ^ Reynolds, 530
  28. ^ Pognon, 10, 16–40
  29. ^ Pognon, 40; Bober 1948, pp. 2–3; Cazelles and Rathofer
  30. ^ Pognon, 40
  31. ^ Pognon, 66
  32. ^ Pognon, 71–73
  33. ^ Pognon, 74

References

  • Alexander, Jonathan (1990). "Labeur and Paresse: Ideological Representations of Medieval Peasant Labor", Art Bulletin, vol. 72, pp. 443–452.
  • Bober, Harry (1948). "The Zodiacal Miniature of the Très Riches Heures of the Duke of Berry: Its Sources and Meaning". Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes. 11: 1–34. doi:10.2307/750460. JSTOR 750460. S2CID 195041446.
  • Camille, Michael (1990). "The Très Riches Heures: An Illuminated Manuscript in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction." Critical Inquiry, vol. 17 (Autumn), pp. 72–107, JSTOR 1343727.
  • Cazelles, Raymond; Rathofer, Johannes (1988). Illuminations of heaven and earth : the glories of the Très riches heures du duc de Berry. New York: H.N. Abrams. ISBN 9780810911284.
  • Delisle, Léopold (1884). "Les livres d'heures du duc de Berry", in three parts. Gazette des Beaux-Arts, period 2, vol. 29, pp. 97–110, pp. 281–292, pp. 391–405.
  • Husband, Timothy (2008). The Art of Illumination: The Limbourg Brothers and the Belles Heures of Jean de France, Duc de Berry. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 9781588392947.
  • Longnon, John; Cazelles, Raymond; Meiss, Millard (1969). The Tres Riches Heures of Jean, Duke of Berry. New York: G. Braziller. OCLC 1468551, 120082, 74118080.
  • Manion, Margaret M. (1995). "Psalter Illustration in the Très Riches Heures of Jean de Berry." Gesta (International Center of Medieval Art) vol. 34, no. 2, pp. 147–161.
  • Manion, Margaret M. (1996). "Très Riches Heures. Book of Hours.", vol. 31, pp. 308–310, in The Dictionary of Art, edited by Jane Turner, reprinted with minor corrections in 1998. New York: Grove. ISBN 9781884446009. Also at Oxford Art Online (bibliography updated 9 July 2012; subscription required).
  • Pognon, Edmond (1987). Les Très Riches Heures du Duc de Berry, Geneva: Liber.
  • Reynolds, Catherine (2005). "The 'Très Riches Heures', the Bedford Workshop and Barthélemy d'Eyck", The Burlington Magazine, Vol. 147, No. 1229 (August), pp. 526–533, JSTOR 20074073.

Further reading

Books

  • Jules Guiffrey, Inventaires de Jean, duc de Berry (1401–1416). Paris: Leroux, 1894, 347 p. Copy at the Internet Archive.
  • Paul Durrieu, Les Très Riches Heures de Jean de France, duc de Berry, Plon, 1904, 261 p. (text) + 64 heliogravure plates, 320 copies printed OCLC 2924405, 193861254
  • Erwin Panofsky, Early Netherlandish Painting, 1953.
  • Millard Meiss, French Painting in the Time of Jean De Berry : Limbourgs and Their Contemporaries, Thames and Hudson, 1974, 533 p. (ISBN 0-500-23201-6)
  • Raymond Cazelles and Johannes Rathofer, Les Très Riches Heures du Duc de Berry, Luzern, Faksimile-Verlag, 1984, 416+435 p., facsimile edition of 980 copies with commentary volume
  • L. Scharcherl, Très Riches Heures, Behind the Gothic masterpiece, München, Prestel, 1996.
  • Patricia Stirnemann and Inès Villela-Petit, Les Très Riches Heures du duc de Berry et l'enluminure en France au début du XVe siècle, Paris, Somogy éditions d'art / Musée Condé, 2004, 86 p. ISBN 2850567426
  • Patricia Stirnemann, Les Très Riches Heures du duc de Berry, Paris, Réunion des musées nationaux, 2004.
  • Rob Dückers and Pieter Roelofs, The Limbourg Brothers : Nijmegen Masters at the French Court 1400-1416, Ludion, Antwerp, 2005, 447 p. ISBN 90-5544-596-7
  • Laurent Ferri and Hélène Jacquemard, The Très Riches Heures du duc de Berry : The Glory of the Medieval Book, Paris/Chantilly, Skira/Domaine de Chantilly, 2018, 80 p. ISBN 978-2370740847

Articles

  • Harry Bober. "The Zodiacal Miniature of the Très Riches heures of the Duke of Berry: Its Sources and Meaning." Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes, 11 (1948), p. 1–34, pl. 5g and 5 h.
  • Eberhard König. "Un grand miniaturiste inconnu du XVe siècle français. Le peintre de l'octobre des Très Riches Heures du duc de Berry." Les dossiers de l'archéologie. Enluminure gothique, 16 (1976, p. 96–123.
  • Michael Bath. "Imperial renovatio symbolism in the Très Riches Heures." Simiolus, 17/1 (1987), p. 5–22.
  • Herman Th. Colenbrander. "The Limbourg brothers, the miniaturists of Très Riches Heures du Duc de Berry?" Masters and miniatures. Proceedings of the congress on medieval manuscript illumination in the Northern Netherlands (Utrecht, 10–13 December 1989), edited by Koert van der Horst and Johann-Christian Klamt, Doornspijk, 1991 (Studies and Facsimiles of Netherlands illuminated manuscripts, 3), p. 109–116.
  • Herman Th. Colenbrander. "The Limbourg Brothers, the joyaux of Constantine and Heraclius, the Très Riches Heures and the visit of the Byzantine Emperor Manuel II Palaeologus to Paris in 1400–1402." Flanders in a European perspective : Manuscript illumination around 1400 in Flanders and abroad, edited by Maurits Smeyers and Bert Cardon, Leuven, 1995 (Corpus of illuminated manuscripts, 8), p. 171–184.
  • Margaret M. Manion. "Psalter Illustration in the Très Riches Heures of Jean de Berry."Gesta, 34/2 (1995), p. 147–161.
  • Herman Th. Colenbrander. "Les Très riches heures de Jean, duc de Berry: Un document politique?" Cahiers d'archéologie et d'histoire du Berry. En Berry, du Moyen-Âge à la Renaissance. Pages d'histoire et d'histoire de l'art. Mélanges offerts à Jean-Yves Ribault, edited by P. Goldman et C.-E. Roth, 1996.
  • Matthias Müller. "Das irdische Territorium als Abbild eines himmlischen. Überlegungen zu den Monatsbildern in den Très Riches Heures des Herzogs Jean de Berry." Bildnis, Fürst und Territorium, Rudolstädter Forschungen zur Residenzkultur, 2 (2000), p. 11-29.
  • Klara H. Broekhuijsen. "The legend of the grateful dead. A misinterpreted miniature in the Très Riches Heures of Jean de Berry." Liber amicorum in memory of Professor Dr. Maurits Smeyers, edited by Bert Cardon, Jan Van der Stock and Dominique Vanwijnsberghe, Leuven, 2002 (Corpus of illuminated manuscripts, 11–12), p. 213–230.
  • Patricia Stirnemann and Claudia Rabel. "The 'Très Riches Heures' and two artists associated with the Bedford workshop." The Burlington Magazine, 147 (2005), p. 534–538.
  • Catherine Reynolds. "The Très Riches Heures, the Bedford workshop and Barthélemy d'Eyck." The Burlington Magazine, 147 (2005).
  • Patricia Stirnemann. "Combien de copistes et d'artistes ont contribué aux Très Riches Heures du duc de Berry?" La création artistique en France autour de 1400, edited by Elisabeth Taburet Delahaye. Paris, Ecole du Louvre, 2006, p. 365–380.
  • Nicole Reynaud. "Petite note à propos des Très Riches Heures du duc de Berry et de leur entrée à la cour de Savoie." Mélanges en l’honneur de François Avril, edited by Mara Hofmann and Caroline Zöhl, Turnhout, Paris, 2007 (Ars Nova, 15), p. 273–277.
  • Patricia Stirnemann. "Les Très Riches Heures et les Heures de Bedford." Revista de História da Arte, 7 (2009), p. 139–151.
  • Jean-Baptiste Lebigue. "Jean de Berry à l'heure de l'Union. Les Très Riches Heures et la réforme du calendrier à la fin du Grand Schisme." Eglise et Etat, Eglise ou Etat ? Les clercs et la genèse de l'Etat moderne, edited by Christine Barralis et alii. Paris, Publications de la Sorbonne, Ecole française de Rome, 2014, p. 367–389.

External links

  • Château de Chantilly (in French)
  • Initiale (in French)

très, riches, heures, berry, french, pronunciation, tʁɛ, ʁiʃz, œʁ, beʁi, english, very, rich, hours, duke, berry, très, riches, heures, most, famous, possibly, best, surviving, example, manuscript, illumination, late, phase, international, gothic, style, book,. The Tres Riches Heures du Duc de Berry French pronunciation tʁɛ ʁiʃz œʁ dy dyk de beʁi English The Very Rich Hours of the Duke of Berry 1 or Tres Riches Heures is the most famous and possibly the best surviving example of manuscript illumination in the late phase of the International Gothic style It is a book of hours a collection of prayers to be said at the canonical hours It was created between c 1412 and 1416 for the extravagant royal bibliophile and patron John Duke of Berry by the Limbourg brothers 2 When the three painters and their sponsor died in 1416 possibly victims of plague the manuscript was left unfinished It was further embellished in the 1440s by an anonymous painter who many art historians believe was Barthelemy d Eyck In 1485 1489 it was brought to its present state by the painter Jean Colombe on behalf of the Duke of Savoy Acquired by the Duc d Aumale in 1856 the book is now MS 65 in the Musee Conde Chantilly France Page from the calendar of the Tres Riches Heures showing the household of John Duke of Berry exchanging New Year gifts The Duke is seated at the right in blue The Baptism of Saint Augustine folio 37v The Nativity of Jesus folio 44v Consisting of a total of 206 leaves of very fine quality parchment 2 30 cm 12 in in height by 21 5 cm 8 1 2 in in width the manuscript contains 66 large miniatures and 65 small The design of the book which is long and complex has undergone many changes and reversals Many artists contributed to its miniatures calligraphy initials and marginal decorations but determining their precise number and identity remains a matter of debate Painted largely by artists from the Low Countries often using rare and costly pigments and gold 3 and with an unusually large number of illustrations the book is one of the most lavish late medieval illuminated manuscripts After three centuries in obscurity the Tres Riches Heures gained wide recognition in the late nineteenth and twentieth centuries despite having only very limited public exposure at the Musee Conde Its miniatures helped to shape an ideal image of the Middle Ages in the collective imagination often being interpreted to serve political and nationalist agendas 4 This is particularly true for the calendar images which are the most commonly reproduced They offer vivid representations of peasants performing agricultural work as well as aristocrats in formal attire against a background of remarkable medieval architecture Contents 1 Historical context 1 1 Duke of Berry 1 2 Provenance 1 3 Recent history 2 Artists 2 1 The Limbourg brothers 2 2 Jean Colombe 2 3 The Intermediate Painter 2 4 Attribution of the calendar miniatures 3 Function 4 Calendar gallery 5 Technique 5 1 Vellum 5 2 Illustrations 6 Contents 7 Stylistic analysis 8 Notes 9 References 10 Further reading 10 1 Books 10 2 Articles 11 External linksHistorical context EditThe Golden Age of the book of hours in Europe took place from 1350 to 1480 the book of hours became popular in France around 1400 Longnon Cazelles and Meiss 1969 At this time many major French artists undertook manuscript illumination Duke of Berry Edit John Duke of Berry is the French prince for whom the Tres Riches Heures was made Berry was the third son of the future king of France John the Good and the brother and uncle of the next two kings Little is known of Berry s education but it is certain that he spent his adolescence among arts and literature Cazelles and Rathofer 1988 The young prince lived an extravagant life necessitating frequent loans He commissioned many works of art which he amassed in his Saint Chapelle mansion Upon Berry s death in 1416 a final inventory was done on his estate that described the incomplete and unbound gatherings of the book as the tres riches heures very rich ly decorated hours to distinguish it from the 15 other books of hours in Berry s collection including the Belles Heures beautiful hours and Petites Heures little hours Cazelles and Rathofer 1988 Provenance Edit The Tres Riches Heures has changed ownership many times since its creation The gatherings were certainly in Berry s estate on his death in 1416 but after this little is clear until 1485 A good deal is known about the lengthy and messy disposal of Berry s goods to satisfy his many creditors which was disrupted by the insanity of the king and the Burgundian and English occupation of Paris but there are no references to the manuscript 5 It seems to have been in Paris for much of this period and probably earlier some borders suggest the style of the Parisian Bedford Master s workshop and works from the 1410s to the 1440s by the Bedford workshop later taken over by the Dunois Master use border designs from other pages suggesting that the manuscript was available for copying in Paris 5 Cover of the bound manuscript Duke Charles I of Savoy acquired the manuscript probably as a gift and commissioned Jean Colombe to complete the manuscript around 1485 1489 Sixteenth century Flemish artists imitated the figures or entire compositions found in the calendar Cazelles and Rathofer 1988 The manuscript belonged to Margaret of Austria Duchess of Savoy 1480 1530 Governor of the Habsburg Netherlands from 1507 to 1515 and again from 1519 to 1530 6 After this its history is unknown until the 18th century when it was given its present bookbinding with the arms of the Serra family of Genoa Italy It was inherited from the Serras by Baron Felix de Margherita of Turin and Milan The French Orleanist pretender Henri d Orleans Duke of Aumale then in exile at Twickenham near London bought it from the baron in 1856 On his return to France in 1871 Aumale placed it in his library at the Chateau de Chantilly which he bequeathed to the Institut de France as the home of the Musee Conde 7 Recent history Edit The duc d Aumale with a friend in his study at Chantilly When Aumale saw the manuscript in Genoa he was able to recognize it as a commission of Berry probably because he was familiar with a set of plates of other manuscripts of Berry published in 1834 and subsidized by the government of the duke s father King Louis Philippe I 8 Aumale gave the German art historian Gustav Friedrich Waagen breakfast and a private view of the manuscript at Orleans House just in time for a 10 page account to appear in Waagen s Galleries and Cabinets of Art in Great Britain in 1857 so beginning its rise to fame 9 He also exhibited it in 1862 to the members of the Fine Arts Club 10 The connection with the tres riches heures listed in the 1416 inventory was made by Leopold Victor Delisle of the Bibliotheque nationale de France and communicated to Aumale in 1881 before being published in 1884 in the Gazette des Beaux Arts it has never been seriously disputed 11 The manuscript took pride of place in a three part article on all of Berry s manuscripts then known and was the only one illustrated with four plates in heliogravure 12 However the manuscript was called the Grandes Heures du duc de Berry in this a title now given to another manuscript based on its larger page size The name Heures de Chantilly was also used in the next decades 13 A monograph with 65 heliogravure plates was published by Paul Durrieu in 1904 to coincide with a major exhibition of French Gothic art in Paris where it was exhibited in the form of 12 plates from the Durrieu monograph as the terms of Aumale s bequest forbade its removal from Chantilly 14 The work became increasingly famous and increasingly reproduced The first colour reproductions using the technique of photogravure appeared in 1940 in the French art quarterly Verve Each issue of this lavish magazine cost three hundred francs 15 In January 1948 the very popular American photo magazine Life published a feature with full page reproductions of the 12 calendar scenes at a little larger than their actual size but at very low quality Catering to American sensibilities of the time the magazine censored one of the images by retouching the genitals of the peasant in the February scene 16 The Musee Conde decided in the 1980s somewhat controversially to remove the manuscript completely both from public display and scholarly access replacing it with copies of a complete modern facsimile 17 Michael Camille argues that this completes the logic of the reception history of a work that has almost entirely become famous through reproductions of its images with the most famous images having been seen in the original by only a very small number of people 4 Artists Edit The Limbourg brothers Christ Led to Judgment folio 143r 18 There has been much debate regarding the identity and number of artists who contributed to the Tres Riches Heures The Limbourg brothers Edit In 1884 Leopold Delisle correlated the manuscript with the description of an item in an inventory drawn up after Berry s death several gatherings of a very rich book of hours tres riches heures richly historiated and illuminated that Pol Paul and his brothers made 19 Delisle s resulting attribution to Paul de Limbourg and his two brothers Jean and Herman has received general acceptance and also provided the manuscript with its name 2 The three Limbourg brothers had originally worked under the supervision of Berry s brother Philip the Bold Duke of Burgundy on a Bible Moralisee and had come to work for Berry after Philip s death By 1411 the Limbourgs were permanent members of Berry s household Cazelles and Rathofer 1988 It is also generally agreed that another of Berry s books of hours the Belles Heures completed between 1408 and 1409 can also be attributed to the brothers It is thought that the Limbourg contribution to the Tres Riches Heures was between about 1412 and their deaths in 1416 Documentation from 1416 was found indicating that Jean followed by Paul and Herman had died Jean de Berry died later that year Cazelles and Rathofer 1988 Apart from the main campaign of illumination the text border decorations and gilding were most likely executed by assistants or specialists who remain unknown The choice of castles in the calendar is one factor in the dating of the brothers contribution The Chateau of Bicetre just outside Paris was one of Berry s grandest residences but does not appear in the calendar It seems likely that this was because no image had been created by October 1411 when a large mob from Paris looted it and set it on fire in the Armagnac Burgundian Civil War However the chateaux at Dourdan April and Etampes July are both shown although Berry lost them to the Burgundians at the end of 1411 with Etampes being badly damaged in the siege 20 Man of Sorrows with Duke Charles I of Savoy and his wife from 1485 to 1489 folio 75r Jean Colombe Edit Folio 75 of the Tres Riches Heures includes Duke Charles I of Savoy and his wife The two were married in 1485 and the Duke died in 1489 implying that it was not one of the original folios The second painter was identified by Paul Durrieu as Jean Colombe 21 who was paid 25 gold pieces by the Duke to complete certain canonical hours Cazelles and Rathofer 1988 The funeral of Raymond Diocres folio 86v There were some miniatures which were incomplete and needed filling in for example the foreground figures and faces of the miniature illustrating the Office of the Dead known as the Funeral of Raymond Diocres 22 There are other subtle differences between the miniatures created by the Limbourgs and Colombe Colombe chose to set large miniatures in frames of marble and gold columns His faces are less delicate with more pronounced features He also used a very intense blue paint that is seen in the landscape of some miniatures Colombe is worked in his own style without attempting to imitate that of the Limbourgs Cazelles and Rathofer 1988 In folio 75 he followed the Limbourgs by including a depiction of one of his patron s castles in the Duchy of Savoy in the landscape background The Intermediate Painter Edit The intermediate painter also called the Master of the Shadows as shadows are an element of his style is often thought to be Barthelemy van Eyck strictly the miniaturist known as the Master of Rene of Anjou who is now normally identified with the documented painter Barthelemy van Eyck 23 who would probably have been at work in the 1440s Other scholars put his work as early as the 1420s though there is no documentation for this 6 At any rate the intermediate artist is assumed to have worked on the manuscript sometime between 1416 and 1485 Evidence from the artistic style as well as the details of costume suggests that the Limbourgs did not paint some of the calendar miniatures Figures in the miniatures for January April May and August are dressed in styles from 1420 The figures strolling in October are dressed in a sober fashion indicative of the mid fifteenth century It is known that the gatherings fell into hands of King Charles VII after Berry s death and it is assumed that the intermediate painter is associated with his court Cazelles and Rathofer 1988 Catherine Reynolds in an article of 2005 approached the dating of the intermediate painter s work through the borrowings from it visible in the work of other Parisian illuminators and placed it in the late 1430s or at the start of the 1440s This is inconveniently early for what she describes as the generally accepted identification with Barthelemy van Eyck and in any case she detects a number of stylistic differences between van Eyck and the intermediate painter 24 Jonathan Alexander sees no stylistic need to hypothesize an intermediate painter at all 25 February attributed to Paul Limbourg or the Rustic painter Attribution of the calendar miniatures Edit The artists of the calendar miniatures have been identified as follows Cazelles and Rathofer 1988 January Jean February Paul March Paul and Colombe April Jean May Jean June Paul Jean Herman and Colombe July Paul August Jean September Paul and Colombe October Paul and Colombe November Colombe December PaulPognon gives the following breakdown of the main miniatures in the Calendar using more cautious stylistic names for the artists 26 January the courtly painter February the rustic painter March the courtly painter landscape and the Master of the Shadows figures April the courtly painter May the courtly painter June the rustic painter July the rustic painter August the courtly painter September the rustic painter landscape and the Master of the Shadows figures October the Master of the Shadows November Jean Colombe December the Master of the ShadowsIn addition Pognon identifies the pious painter who painted many of the religious scenes later in the book during the initial campaign The courtly rustic and pious painters would probably equate to the three Limbourg brothers or perhaps other artists in their workshop There are alternative analyses and divisions proposed by other specialists Function EditA breviary consists of a number of prayers and readings in a short form generally for use by the clergy The book of hours is a simplified form of breviary designed for use by the laity where the prayers are intended for recital at the canonical hours of the liturgical day Canonical hours refer to the division of day and night for the purpose of prayers The regular rhythm of reading led to the term book of hours Cazelles and Rathofer 1988 The book of hours consists of prayers and devotional exercises freely arranged into primary secondary and supplementary texts Other than the calendar at the beginning the order is random and can be customized for the recipient or region The Hours of the Virgin were regarded as the most important and therefore subject to the most lavish illustration The Tres Riches Heures is rare in that it includes several miracles performed before the commencement of the passion Cazelles and Rathofer 1988 Calendar gallery EditFuller descriptions are available at a University of Chicago website 3 JanuaryA New Year s Day feast including Jean de Berry February MarchChateau de Lusignan AprilChateau de Dourdan MayHotel de Nesle the Duke s Paris residence JunePalais de la Cite and the Sainte Chapelle 3 JulyPalace of Poitiers AugustFalconry Chateau d Etampes SeptemberChateau de Saumur OctoberLouvre November DecemberChateau de VincennesTechnique Edit Martyrdom of Saint Mark in Alexandria Limbourg brothers Vellum Edit The parchment or vellum used in the 206 folios is fine quality calfskin All bi folios are complete rectangles and the edges are unblemished and therefore must have been cut from the centre of skins of sufficient size The folios measure 30 cm in height by 21 5 cm in width although the original size was larger as evidenced by several cuts into the miniatures The tears and natural flaws in the vellum are infrequent and almost go unnoticed Cazelles and Rathofer 1988 Illustrations Edit The ground colors were moistened with water and thickened with either gum Arabic or tragacanth gum Approximately ten shades are used besides white and black The detailed work required extremely small brushes and probably a lens Longnon Cazelles and Meiss 1969 Contents EditThe contents of the book are typical of those of a book of hours though the quantity of illumination is extremely unusual The Calendar Folios 1 13A generalized calendar not specific to any year of church feasts and saints days often illuminated with representations of the Labours of the Months is a usual part of a book of hours but the illustrations of the months in the Tres Riches Heures are exceptional and innovative in their size and the best known element of the decoration of the manuscript 27 Up to this point any scenes of the labours had been smaller images on the same page as the calendar text 25 though later 15th century calendars often adopted the Limbourg s innovation of a full page miniature though most had smaller pages than here They were also unprecedented in mostly showing one of the duke s castles in the background They are filled with details of the delights and labors of the months from the Duke s court to his peasants a counterpart to the prayers of the hours 28 Each illustration is surmounted with its appropriate hemisphere showing a solar chariot the signs and degrees of the zodiac and numbering the days of the month and the martyrological letters for the ecclesiastic lunar calendar Each month of the calendar is allotted an opening of two pages on the righthand page the calendar listing notable feast days and on the left the miniature January is the largest miniature in the calendar and includes the Duke of Berry at a New Year s Day feast Longnon Cazelles and Meiss 1969 dd September with the Chateau de Saumur Several of the miniatures depict the Duke fields or castles he owned and places he visited This shows the personal function of the book of hours as it is customized to suit the patron Cazelles and Rathofer 1988 dd The September miniature was almost certainly painted in two phases first the upper section with the sky and chateau was painted in the middle of the fifteenth century around 1438 1442 in the time of Rene d Anjou and Yolande d Aragon then the lower scene of grape picking was completed by Jean Colombe from a sketch left by his predecessor In general artists started with the background then painted in the characters before finishing with their faces dd In the foreground it is grape picking time The woman in a white and red apron looks pregnant Other young peasants are picking the purple bunches while one of them is tasting the grapes A further character holding a basket is walking towards a mule which is carrying two panniers The grapes are being loaded either into the mules panniers or into the vats on the cart pulled by two oxen dd In the background stands the Chateau de Saumur with its chimneys and weathervanes decorated with golden fleurs de lys It was built by Louis II d Anjou then given to his wife Yolande d Aragon the mother of King Rene and mother in law of Charles VII over whom she had a considerable sway The presence of this chateau can be explained by the important role played by Yolande in the early years of the reign of Charles VII and by how much the king enjoyed staying there On the left behind the enceinte stands a clock tower the chimneys of the kitchens and a gate leading to a drawbridge A horse is coming out and a woman with a basket on her head is on her way in dd In front of the chateau between the vines and the moat can be seen a tilting ground surrounded by palisades where tournaments were held dd The architectural design of the chateau draws the gaze up towards the dreamily poetic volutes The towers conceal their protective nature beneath festive trappings redolent of fabulous adventures in the forests of Arthurian legends and suggestive of the presence of God in His creation As Francois Cali put it These extravagant towers are a dream landscape with constellations of canopies pinnacles gables and arrows with their crockets fluttering against the light dd In the middle of the grape pickers a character is showing his behind This intentionally grotesque touch contrasts with the extraordinary elegance of the chateau Jean Colombe s peasants lack the dignity they have in the other miniatures dd The Anatomical Zodiac Man Purgatory f 113v Jean Colombe Anatomical Zodiac Man Folio 14The Anatomical Zodiac Man concludes the calendar The twelve signs of the zodiac appear over the corresponding anatomical regions It contains Berry s coat of arms of three fleurs de lis on a blue background Such an image appears in no other book of hours but astrology was one of Berry s interests and several works on the subject were in Berry s library 29 The two figures are sometimes regarded as male and looking out at the viewer female but Pognon finds both strangely hermaphrodite and intentionally so 30 dd Readings from the Gospels Folios 17 19 Prayers to the Virgin Folios 22 25 Fall of Man Folio 25This part is represented in four stages within the same miniature The Fall of Man is thought to have been by Jean de Limbourg and was to belong to a series of miniatures not originally intended for the Tres Riches Heures dd Hours of the Virgin Matins Folios 26 60Illustrated with a cycle of the Life of the Virgin with the page showing the Rest on the Flight to Egypt by Jean Colombe 31 dd Psalms Folio 61 63The illustrations for the psalms employ a literal interpretation of the text that is rare for the late medieval period Manion 1995 dd The Penitential Psalms Folio 64 71This section begins with the Fall of the Angels which bears a lot of similarity to a panel painting by a Sienese painter dating from 1340 to 1348 now at the Louvre Longnon Cazelles and Meiss 1969 The Limbourgs may have known this work This miniature has been identified as not originally intended for the Tres Riches Heures The final opening has a double page image of the Procession of Saint Gregory that surrounds the text columns with depictions of the skyline of Rome 32 dd Hours of the Cross Folios 75 78In this section Christ is depicted as the Man of Sorrows exhibiting wounds and surrounded by instruments of the passion This is a common iconographic type in fourteenth century manuscripts Cazelles and Rathofer 1988 dd Hours of the Holy Ghost Folios 79 81 Pentecost f 79r Office of the Dead Folios 82 107Colombe painted all the miniatures of this section other than Hell which was painted by a Limbourg brother Hell is based on a description from a thirteenth century Irish monk Tundal Cazelles and Rathofer 1988 This miniature may not have been originally intended for the manuscript Meiss and subsequent writers have argued that the full page miniatures that codicological data show were inserted on single leaves were not originally designed for the Tres Riches Heures including the Anatomical Man folio 14v The Fall folio 25r the Meeting of the Magi folio 51v the Adoration of the Magi folio 52r the Presentation folio 54v the Fall of the Rebel Angels folio 64v Hell folio 108r the Map of Rome folio 141v Margaret Manion however has suggested that although the subjects are handled in an innovative manner they fit within the context of the prayerbook and could well have been part of a developing collaborative plan 22 dd The funeral image shows a reputed incident at the funeral of Raymond Diocres a famous Parisian preacher when in the middle of his Requiem Mass he was said to have lifted up his coffin lid and announced to the congregation I have been condemned to the just judgement of God 33 dd Short Weekday Offices Folios 109 140The Presentation of the Virgin takes place in front of Bourges Cathedral in Berry s ducal capital Longnon Cazelles and Meiss 1969 dd Plan of Rome Folio 141 Hour of the Passion Folio 142 157 Masses for the Liturgical Year Folios 158 204Folio 201 depicts the martyrdom of Andrew the Apostle The Duke of Berry was born on Saint Andrew s Day 1340 consequently this miniature was of great importance to him Cazelles and Rathofer 1988 dd Stylistic analysis EditThe Limbourg brothers had artistic freedom but worked within a framework of the religious didactic manuscript Several artistic innovations by the Limbourg brothers can be noticed in the Tres Riches Heures In the October miniature the study of light was momentous for Western painting Cazelles and Rathofer 1988 People were shown reflected in the water the earliest representation of this type of reflection known thus far Miniature scenes had new informality with no strong framing forms at the edges This allowed for continuity beyond the frame of view to be vividly defined The Limbourgs developed a more naturalistic mode of representation and developed portraiture of people and surroundings Religious figures do not inhabit free open space and courtiers are framed by vegetation This is reminiscent of a more classical representation Longnon Cazelles and Meiss 1969 Some conventions used by the Limbourgs such as a diaper background or the portrayal of night were influenced by artists such as Taddeo Gaddi These conventions were transformed completely into the artist s unique interpretation Longnon Cazelles and Meiss 1969 Manion offers a stylistic analysis of the psalter specifically The psalters offer a systematic program of illuminations corresponding to the individual psalms These images are linked together but are not in the numerical order of the psalter This emphasizes the idea of the abbreviated psalter where each psalm is illustrated once Manion 1995 The miniatures are not modeled on any specific visual or literary precedence when compared with other fourteenth century psalters The manuscript offers a literal interpretation of the words and lacks a selection of more personal prayers This emphasizes the didactic use of the book of hours Manion 1995 Notes Edit Melissa Snell Les Tres Riches Heures du Duc de Berry ThoughtCo com Retrieved 14 October 2017 literally the very rich hours of the duke of Berry a b c Manion 1996 p 308 a b c Tres Riches Heures du Duc de Berry Archived from the original on June 10 2006 Retrieved 2009 01 23 originally published at humanities uchicago edu a b Camille throughout a b Reynolds 526 528 a b Pognon 15 Camille 72 77 82 Pognon 15 Camille 75 Camille 79 80 Camille 78 Camille 80 81 Camille 83 84 Delisle Camille 84 Camille 82 86 Camille 86 88 Camille 86 90 Camille 1990 pp 73 74 Note however that in 2008 Timothy Husband Curator of the Department of Medieval Art at The Metropolitan Museum of Art reported that he was allowed to examine the manuscript at the Chantilly Library for many uninterrupted hours Husband 2008 p viii Husband 2008 p 314 Item XXV in Delisle 1884 p 106 une layette plusieurs cayers d unes tres riches heures que faisoient Pol et ses freres tres richement historiez et enluminez The English translation without the bracketed explanatory additions is from Manion 1996 p 308 Pognon 13 Pognon 10 a b Manion 1996 p 309 Reynolds 532 Reynolds 532 533 a b Alexander Pognon 12 13 Reynolds 530 Pognon 10 16 40 Pognon 40 Bober 1948 pp 2 3 Cazelles and Rathofer Pognon 40 Pognon 66 Pognon 71 73 Pognon 74References EditAlexander Jonathan 1990 Labeur and Paresse Ideological Representations of Medieval Peasant Labor Art Bulletin vol 72 pp 443 452 Bober Harry 1948 The Zodiacal Miniature of the Tres Riches Heures of the Duke of Berry Its Sources and Meaning Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 11 1 34 doi 10 2307 750460 JSTOR 750460 S2CID 195041446 Camille Michael 1990 The Tres Riches Heures An Illuminated Manuscript in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction Critical Inquiry vol 17 Autumn pp 72 107 JSTOR 1343727 Cazelles Raymond Rathofer Johannes 1988 Illuminations of heaven and earth the glories of the Tres riches heures du duc de Berry New York H N Abrams ISBN 9780810911284 Delisle Leopold 1884 Les livres d heures du duc de Berry in three parts Gazette des Beaux Arts period 2 vol 29 pp 97 110 pp 281 292 pp 391 405 Husband Timothy 2008 The Art of Illumination The Limbourg Brothers and theBelles Heuresof Jean de France Duc de Berry New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 9781588392947 Longnon John Cazelles Raymond Meiss Millard 1969 TheTres Riches Heuresof Jean Duke of Berry New York G Braziller OCLC 1468551 120082 74118080 Manion Margaret M 1995 Psalter Illustration in the Tres Riches Heures of Jean de Berry Gesta International Center of Medieval Art vol 34 no 2 pp 147 161 Manion Margaret M 1996 Tres Riches Heures Book of Hours vol 31 pp 308 310 in The Dictionary of Art edited by Jane Turner reprinted with minor corrections in 1998 New York Grove ISBN 9781884446009 Also at Oxford Art Online bibliography updated 9 July 2012 subscription required Pognon Edmond 1987 Les Tres Riches Heures du Duc de Berry Geneva Liber Reynolds Catherine 2005 The Tres Riches Heures the Bedford Workshop and Barthelemy d Eyck The Burlington Magazine Vol 147 No 1229 August pp 526 533 JSTOR 20074073 Further reading EditBooks Edit Jules Guiffrey Inventaires de Jean duc de Berry 1401 1416 Paris Leroux 1894 347 p Copy at the Internet Archive Paul Durrieu Les Tres Riches Heures de Jean de France duc de Berry Plon 1904 261 p text 64 heliogravure plates 320 copies printed OCLC 2924405 193861254 Erwin Panofsky Early Netherlandish Painting 1953 Millard Meiss French Painting in the Time of Jean De Berry Limbourgs and Their Contemporaries Thames and Hudson 1974 533 p ISBN 0 500 23201 6 Raymond Cazelles and Johannes Rathofer Les Tres Riches Heures du Duc de Berry Luzern Faksimile Verlag 1984 416 435 p facsimile edition of 980 copies with commentary volume L Scharcherl Tres Riches Heures Behind the Gothic masterpiece Munchen Prestel 1996 Patricia Stirnemann and Ines Villela Petit Les Tres Riches Heures du duc de Berry et l enluminure en France au debut du XVe siecle Paris Somogy editions d art Musee Conde 2004 86 p ISBN 2850567426 Patricia Stirnemann Les Tres Riches Heures du duc de Berry Paris Reunion des musees nationaux 2004 Rob Duckers and Pieter Roelofs The Limbourg Brothers Nijmegen Masters at the French Court 1400 1416 Ludion Antwerp 2005 447 p ISBN 90 5544 596 7 Laurent Ferri and Helene Jacquemard The Tres Riches Heures du duc de Berry The Glory of the Medieval Book Paris Chantilly Skira Domaine de Chantilly 2018 80 p ISBN 978 2370740847Articles Edit Harry Bober The Zodiacal Miniature of the Tres Riches heures of the Duke of Berry Its Sources and Meaning Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 11 1948 p 1 34 pl 5g and 5 h Eberhard Konig Un grand miniaturiste inconnu du XVe siecle francais Le peintre de l octobre des Tres Riches Heures du duc de Berry Les dossiers de l archeologie Enluminure gothique 16 1976 p 96 123 Michael Bath Imperial renovatio symbolism in the Tres Riches Heures Simiolus 17 1 1987 p 5 22 Herman Th Colenbrander The Limbourg brothers the miniaturists of Tres Riches Heures du Duc de Berry Masters and miniatures Proceedings of the congress on medieval manuscript illumination in the Northern Netherlands Utrecht 10 13 December 1989 edited by Koert van der Horst and Johann Christian Klamt Doornspijk 1991 Studies and Facsimiles of Netherlands illuminated manuscripts 3 p 109 116 Herman Th Colenbrander The Limbourg Brothers the joyaux of Constantine and Heraclius the Tres Riches Heures and the visit of the Byzantine Emperor Manuel II Palaeologus to Paris in 1400 1402 Flanders in a European perspective Manuscript illumination around 1400 in Flanders and abroad edited by Maurits Smeyers and Bert Cardon Leuven 1995 Corpus of illuminated manuscripts 8 p 171 184 Margaret M Manion Psalter Illustration in the Tres Riches Heures of Jean de Berry Gesta 34 2 1995 p 147 161 Herman Th Colenbrander Les Tres riches heures de Jean duc de Berry Un document politique Cahiers d archeologie et d histoire du Berry En Berry du Moyen Age a la Renaissance Pages d histoire et d histoire de l art Melanges offerts a Jean Yves Ribault edited by P Goldman et C E Roth 1996 Matthias Muller Das irdische Territorium als Abbild eines himmlischen Uberlegungen zu den Monatsbildern in den Tres Riches Heures des Herzogs Jean de Berry Bildnis Furst und Territorium Rudolstadter Forschungen zur Residenzkultur 2 2000 p 11 29 Klara H Broekhuijsen The legend of the grateful dead A misinterpreted miniature in the Tres Riches Heures of Jean de Berry Liber amicorum in memory of Professor Dr Maurits Smeyers edited by Bert Cardon Jan Van der Stock and Dominique Vanwijnsberghe Leuven 2002 Corpus of illuminated manuscripts 11 12 p 213 230 Patricia Stirnemann and Claudia Rabel The Tres Riches Heures and two artists associated with the Bedford workshop The Burlington Magazine 147 2005 p 534 538 Catherine Reynolds The Tres Riches Heures the Bedford workshop and Barthelemy d Eyck The Burlington Magazine 147 2005 Patricia Stirnemann Combien de copistes et d artistes ont contribue aux Tres Riches Heures du duc de Berry La creation artistique en France autour de 1400 edited by Elisabeth Taburet Delahaye Paris Ecole du Louvre 2006 p 365 380 Nicole Reynaud Petite note a propos des Tres Riches Heures du duc de Berry et de leur entree a la cour de Savoie Melanges en l honneur de Francois Avril edited by Mara Hofmann and Caroline Zohl Turnhout Paris 2007 Ars Nova 15 p 273 277 Patricia Stirnemann Les Tres Riches Heures et les Heures de Bedford Revista de Historia da Arte 7 2009 p 139 151 Jean Baptiste Lebigue Jean de Berry a l heure de l Union Les Tres Riches Heures et la reforme du calendrier a la fin du Grand Schisme Eglise et Etat Eglise ou Etat Les clercs et la genese de l Etat moderne edited by Christine Barralis et alii Paris Publications de la Sorbonne Ecole francaise de Rome 2014 p 367 389 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Tres Riches Heures du Duc de Berry Chateau de Chantilly in French Initiale in French Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tres Riches Heures du Duc de Berry amp oldid 1132158738, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.