Date: Fri 02-Jul-1999
Date: Fri 02-Jul-1999
Publication: Ant
Author: JUDIR
Quick Words:
Medieval-Housebook
Full Text:
The Medieval House Book
(with 3 cuts)
NEW YORK CITY -- On tour in the United Sates for the first -- and perhaps only
-- time is the Medieval Housebook , a legendary work of the late Fifteenth
Century, in an exhibition that asks compelling new questions about the
identity of the artist(s) who produced it.
Since the Nineteenth Century, the authorship of the famed illustrations has
been the subject of continuing and often contentious debate inspiring an
uninterrupted flow of scholarly articles and publications all addressing the
Housebook Master problem (Hausbuchmeister-problem or Hausbuchmeisterfrage).
Organized exclusively for the Frick Collection by Timothy B. Husband, curator
of Medieval Art at the Cloisters, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, "The
Medieval Housebook: A View of Fifteenth-Century Life" presents approximately
30 pages of the codex alongside drypoint prints, many never seen in this
country, by the Master of the Amsterdam Cabinet, the artist believed to be
responsible for several of the illustrated pages in the Housebook , and
arguably the finest graphic artist prior to Albrecht Durer.
Manuscripts related to the Housebook , prints by other contemporary masters,
and several examples of stained glass will also be shown in this special
presentation which features, in total, over 80 drawings and objects borrowed
from various owners, private and public.
Of the five venues participating in the international tour of the Medieval
Housebook , the Frick Collection is the sole institution to present the codex
with this particular investigation as its theme.
In fact, the very tour of the Medieval Housebook is somewhat of a remarkable
event. Since the Seventeenth Century, the work has belonged to a private noble
family in southwestern Germany, the Counts of Waldburg Wolfegg, where it has
remained for over 300 years, never before being made available for public
viewing -- despite the lively interest in its pages.
The unique opportunity to borrow and present the Medieval Housebook now exists
because the manuscript has been temporarily unbound for the creation of a
facsimile reproduction. In a manner previously impossible, individual pages
and drawings of the manuscript can be displayed separately for close
examination.
Following the exhibition at the Frick Collection, the book will be permanently
rebound and returned to the Wolfegg family in Germany.
Famed for its full-page pen and ink illustrations, some enhanced with color,
the Medieval Housebook is a compendium of secular texts that provides a
remarkable view of life in a princely court at the end of the Middle Ages. It
was produced in the region of the Middle Rhine of Germany over an uncertain
period of time between 1475 and 1490.
The manuscript has been known as the Medieval Housebook ("das mittelalterliche
Hausbuch") ever since Ralf von Retburg, a cultural historian and the first
scholar to systematically study the manuscript, referred to it as such in
1865. It is not a Housebook in the sense of a household manual and almanac of
the late Middle Ages; rather it is something of a compilation of texts and
images, often seemingly unrelated, the preponderance of which is largely
concerned with the mechanics of warfare.
But it also addresses medicinal treatments, household recipes, animal
husbandry, mining and metallurgy, minting, castle defense, and pyrotechnics.
Among the most vivid of the full-page illustrations are those depicting the
personifications of planets and those born under their signs, a Garden of
Love, a bath house, and tournament scenes.
As with many such manuals, the Medieval Housebook reflects the knowledge of
numerous texts, but is modeled specifically on none.
The Wolfegg Medieval Housebook presently comprises nine gatherings, each with
four vellum sheets folded in two, making eight folia (recto and verso) or 16
pages each, totaling 63 folia or 126 pages. The gatherings are attached by an
arrangement of leather strips, tied and sewn, to a soft leather wrapper dating
from the Seventeenth Century.
The want of a proper binding suggests that the manuscript was not intended for
a larger library, but served as a reference that could have been added to and
updated. The treatise in the first gathering is in Latin; the rest of the
texts are, for the most part, in a German, sprinkled with Hebrew, Latin and
Italian, that suggests an origin in that country's southern region.
Guest curator Timothy Husband notes in the booklet that accompanies the
exhibition at the Frick Collection, "it was not unusual in the late Middle
Ages for manuscripts to be produced by collaborative effort, and the Housebook
appears to be no exception. A number of stylistic observations can heighten
our appreciation of the artistic achievement of the Housebook as well as
inform us of how this exceptional manuscript was created."
Husband suggests that "the illustrations were the cumulative product of no
less than three or four artists... It seems that the workshop... had been
commissioned primarily to create a number of compelling images or groups of
images that stood independently, unimpeded by even text - an extraordinary
concept for a manuscript. Clearly stylistic homogeneity was of secondary
interest, and one might add that what might appear disturbingly inconsistent
to the modern eye was less jarring to the medieval.
From that point of view, the exercise of identifying hands is devalued;
nonetheless, the process of isolating two principal hands in the Medieval
Housebook , who remain frustratingly anonymous - the Master of the Amsterdam
Cabinet and the Master of the Genre and Tournament Scenes - does shed light
both on the production of the manuscript and on the late-Fifteenth Century
workshop practices."
Works by the Master of the Amsterdam Cabinet and the Housebook Master have
also made their way into other collections, and this exhibition includes
additional examples on loan from the Art Institute of Chicago, the Cleveland
Museum of Art, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, the Museum of Fine
Arts, Boston, and the National Gallery of Art, Washington.
The first extensive use of drypoint, a print-making technique, is seen in
works that have been attributed to the Master of the Amsterdam Cabinet. A
drypoint is created by cutting or scratching, using a variety of pointed
styli, into the surface of a soft metal plate, probably a copper and tin or
lead alloy. The needle leaves a curled metal residue or "burr" along the cut
line when the plate is inked and printed on paper. The resulting impression of
these lines yields a silvery, finely modulated, velvety texture.
Because of the softness of the metal, the fine burr and subtle lines are
quickly obliterated by the repeated pressure of the printing press; therefore
the drypoint plate, unlike an engraved plate, is restricted to a relatively
small format and produces only a few quality impressions.
As such, it is a medium suited for a small production, not a mass market. Most
of the drypoints associated with the artist(s) have survived in only one
impression.
The Frick Collection features masterpieces of Western art from the early
Renaissance through the late Nineteenth Century. Important works by Bellini,
El Greco, Rembrandt, Titian, Turner, Vermeer, Whistler and many others are
housed in one of the great mansions remaining from the Gilded Age.
The Collection is at 1 East 70th Street, once the residence of Henry Clay
Frick (1849-1919). Designed by Thomas Hastings of Carrere and Hastings and
constructed in 1913-1914, the building was changed after Mrs Frick's death in
1931, with alterations and additions made by the architect John Russell Pope.
In 1935 the collection opened to the public.
Hours are 10 am to 6 pm Tuesdays through Saturdays, and from 1 to 6 pm
Sundays. Closed Mondays. Children under ten are not admitted to the
collection. Telephone 212/288-0700.