Pimpernel. Blue flower. Stylised design.
Design based on botanical shapes, flowers, pineapple.
Design based on botanical shapes, flowers, pineapple.
Three stylized trefoils. Flower-box.
Naked bearded man on donkey holding club. Blue-caped fox plays bagpipes.
Peach and Prune. Two birds perched on a pimpernel.
Cumfrey and Daisy, Cauldrons, powter plate, yellow dish.
Ash and Almond, large wooden 2-masted ship with anchor on sea by rocks.
Henbane and Hart's Tongue. Table, laid, Animal on pewter dish. Benches.
Blackberry and Birch. Two sprays of birdseyes.
Lynx and Lizard. 2 ornaments with stylized fish heads.
Cockatrice and Crocodile. Dragon with human head in mouth. Crayfish.
Reindeer and Panther. Striped animal with curly hair.
Peacock and Ostrich with its egg above it. Duck.
A scroll alphabet
Alphabet based on human forms.
[click through to larger versions; all captions are quoted]
"In Medieval times, book illustrators aimed to produce very rich illustrations to decorate their books. For inspiration they kept pattern or model books. These books contained jottings of anything that caught the illustrator's eye: figures, animals, monsters, decorative capital letters, borders, motifs. But these weren't drawn firsthand - they were all borrowed from earlier books, paintings or glass windows. [..]
Pattern books were practical tools and also helped to circulate artistic traditions and ideas around the manuscript making community. Because they were working documents, passing between many different people, few medieval pattern books have survived."
The present work, Bodleian MS. Ashmole 1504 ('The Tudor Pattern Book'), is unique in the sense that it is part-bestiary, part-herbal and an important visual record of early cultivated plants. It was produced in East Anglia in about 1520 and its twin (known as the 'Helmingham Herbal and Bestiary' and perhaps a little older than the Ashmole variant) is now part of the Yale Center for British Art collection in
- Bodleian MS. Ashmole 1504 is hosted on the Oxford University Luna servlet - just over one hundred thumbnail pages.
- A medieval pattern book at the British Library.
- From the model-book to the sketch-book.
- Hemp and Hops, together again at last (from Got Medieval) on this image from the Ashmole 1504 manuscript.
- Previously related and well worth seeing: Gothic Illuminated Sketchbook & Lace Modelbuchs [also: Lace Typography & The Bodleian Library Medieval and Renaissance Manuscripts]
- The Medieval Bestiary.
- Just because I found it in passing: The Art Tribune - the latest news in western art from the Middle Ages to the 1930s. [great link list to image sources too]
- 'Two East Anglian Picture Books : A Facsimile of the Helmingham Herbal and Bestiary and Bodleian Ms. Ashmole 1504', ed. by Nicholas Barker (London: The Roxburghe Club, 1988) [see here; it's listed at a few bookseller and catalogue sites]
- 'Flowers and Trees of Tudor England' by Clare Putnam London: Hugh Evelyn, 1972) "..original English edition. small folio, unpaginated (ca. 70 pp.), reproducing 32 full page color plates form leaves from Ms. Ashmole 1504" [Listed by Gardenbooks site & Amazon].
- Also reproducing colour images from our Tudor Pattern Book: 'Shakespeare's Flowers', 1994. London: Pavilion Books Ltd by Jenny de Gex.
10 comments :
Thank you for posting this - these are amazing!
These represent a fascinating glimpse into the lives of the artists at the dawn of the renaissance period. Wonderful post!
What splendid designs! Strong and bold and clean-- no equivocation here.
Beautiful! A small correction - the Yale Center for British Art is in New Haven, CT
Oh thanks - that location must have come from one of the secondary sources: I often write down the state for my own memory actually. I'll fix it.
More at modelbooks & sketchbooks http://larsdatter.com/modelbooks.htm also!
LOL…
"Henbane and Hart's Tongue. Table, laid, Animal on pewter dish. Benches."
As always, these are delightful!
Hi there!
Where is the bloodhound image for. We are thinking of using that image for our exhibition and we need the copyright. Where would I be able to find your contact details. So that I can tell you more about the exhibition.
Thanks,
Ange
Hi Trinkets..
The link up above - after the images - embedded in the large text will take you to the Oxford Uni website where the manuscript is hosted. I won't comment on copyright (UK is different to USA) other than to suggest you write to Oxford Uni, tell them what you want to do and ask their opinion/input etc. I really have no other advice on that point. And top right of this blog site you'll see an about page in which you'll find my email address if you need it.
Thanks for all the links to other model books. I had purchased a childrens colouring book from the Bod's book shop sale table several years ago for 30P. It has sat on a bookshelf until I perused it just now and noticed this little "bargain" book referenced the line drawings were copied from MS.Ashmole 1504. I'm passionate about illuminated books, especially 15th-16th-c art. I've also been collecting model book facsimiles whenever I can find them. Mille gracie!
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