Saturday, June 13, 2009

The Treasury of Ornament 3

Treasury of Ornament035

Italian Renaissance Polychrome Pottery

Wainscot and floor plates from houses/buildings in Genoa and Bologna. The ornaments most resemble Byzantine and Oriental models and the studio of Della Robbia [see one; two] attained special celebrity as the leading plate-mosaic manufacturer.



Treasury of Ornament036

Italian Renaissance Ornamental Painting

House front and court decoration from Genoa, Milan and Pienza.
"It was at the commencement of the 15th century, that the Renaissance style began to make its appearance in Italy, and the period till about 1500 may be called the period of Early Renaissance, in contradistinction of High Renaissance which lasted till the middle of the 16th century.

Renaissance is a new adaptation, not a servile imitation, but a free treatment of antique forms; the plainest evidence of this is given by the ornament, of which this style makes a richer and ampler use than any other. This applies more particularly to the motives we meet with; and here we observe above all the vegetable ornament, which in Early Renaissance generally covers the ground only moderately.

We find almost everywhere delicate, beautifully curved branches in a symmetrical or at least regular arrangement, in which the antique acanthus-leaf acts as the principal part, although, not without the most various transformations. Also vine, laurel, ivy etc. are frequently employed, partly copying nature directly, partly idealised. But this foliage with its branches and fruit is still enlivened by a rich variation of animals, fantastical beings, human figures as well as symbolical subjects, arms, masks, emblems, vases, candelabras etc.

Most cultivated is the combination of human figures and animals with vegetable elements. Finally a not less important part of the decoration are coats or arms and escutcheons, the latter usually a so-called horse-front-shields [the two parallel strips upper middle in the image above] in the period of the Early Renaissance, later on as cartouches."



Treasury of Ornament037

Italian Renaissance Wood Mosaic

Examples from choir stalls in Verona, Organo, Bologna and Pavia. In general, wood carving was highly flourished, particularly the style of woodwork known as intarsia*, where inlaid wood panels were used for stalls, shrines and vestries in churches.



Treasury of Ornament038

Italian Renaissance Ceiling Painting

Borders, medallions and arch-panels from ceilings in the Vatican, Certosa, Lodi and Rome. Mixed animal and vegetable motive ornamentation, often framed with original fresco border patterns that are themselves often inspired by stucco decoration, except imitated with a brush. Rosette patterns that pre-date the Renaissance become an assimilated form of the developing artistic expression.



Treasury of Ornament039

Italian Renaissance Laces

Lace patterns from Venice and Genoa, the two main centres where the perfection of this art-form virtually makes it a creation of the Renaissance. Of the astonishingly intricate and beautiful lace products, Venetian point-in-relief is the most esteemed. The decoration is dominated by vegetable motives, comparable to ornamentation seen in other Renaissance arts.



Treasury of Ornament040

Italian Renaissance Embroidery and Carpet Weaving

Silk, relief and plain embroidered {(+/-) appliqué} examples from liturgical vestments and carpet border patterns from Florence, Verona, Stuttgart and Munich. Embroidery frequently includes medallion designs in addition to the normal Renaissance ornamental repertoire ; carpet weaving often follows Byzantine and Oriental patterns.



Treasury of Ornament041

Italian Renaissance Sgraffitos*, Wood-Mosaic,
Marble-Mosaic and Basso Relievos

Sgraffiti (earthenware and wall art where designs are scratched into a rendered overlay such as stucco) from houses in Rome, inlaid marble-work from Siena Cathedral and tomb-plates in Venice, Florence as well as basso-relievos from Roman and Venetian tombs.



Treasury of Ornament042

Italian Renaissance Ceiling and Wall Painting

Ceiling painting in the Palazzo Doria in Genoa, pilaster decoration from Raphael's loggia series at the Vatican and window-niche panels from the Vatican Museum.

The late 15th century discovery of the ancient Domus Aureus [highly recommended: one, two] and particularly the Titus baths, provided Raphael with inspiring ornaments to reinterpret, leading to the creation of new variations of motifs for figures and garlands etc.



Treasury of Ornament043

Italian Renaissance Illumination, Weaving and Marble-Mosaic

Velvet and silk material decorations, marble table mosaic and various manuscript highlights. Despite the availability of the printing press, there was still a demand during the Renaissance for illumination in prestigious works that required multi-coloured outcomes and highly decorative initials, presenting a varied mixture of ancient, mythological and Christian motifs. The vegetation in the manuscript ornament veered away from the natural towards the stylised. Marble mosaics (eg. the vase above), on the other hand, reproduced natural world elements with some precision.



Treasury of Ornament044

Italian Renaissance Pottery Painting

Profile and border decorations from vases, dishes, fountains and inkstand from Urbino, Florence and Pesaro. Tin-glazing was invented at the end of the 15th century and resulted in a total change in the faience* technique. [I don't understand much of what the author states about majolica-ware]



Treasury of Ornament045

Italian Renaissance Plastic Ornaments in Marble and Bronze

Door lintels and frames, friezes, pilaster strip, and door knockers from palaces and churches in Urbino, Siena and Florence.



Treasury of Ornament046

Italian Renaissance Ceiling and Wall Painting

Loggia details from the Vatican, borders and pilaster panels from the Villa di Papa Giulio in Rome.
"It is in about the year 1540 that the period of the so-called Late Renaissance begins. [..] We find no more the same charm and grace as in the creations of the Early and High Renaissance, but some cool, rather caluculating feature pervades the whole treatment.

The beautiful harmonious union of the figural with vegetable element, as well as the nicely balanced proportion of the colours to each other are somewhat decaying. The larger admission of white surfaces makes a dry and barren impression upon the spectator.

The vegetable ornament is less elaborately finished, its place being often taken by elements, from which later on the so-called cartouches were developed, and most of the figures do not show to advantage by their artificial composition. Neither in the disposition of this ornament over the field to be decorated, is the perfection of the previous epoch of art within this domain attained."



Treasury of Ornament047

Italian Renaissance Works in
Precious Metals with Paintings in Enamel

Pendants, jug handles, cup cover, shield masks, altar crowning (largest item) and vase decoration from Florence (at least). Some of the work was carried out by French artists. Benvenuto Cellini is considered the leading master of precious metal work from about the middle of the 16th century. "Plants, animals, human figures, frequently in the most strange compositions, by far preponderate over the purely geometric ornament."



Treasury of Ornament048

French Renaissance Typographic Ornaments



Treasury of Ornament049

French Renaissance Block Printing and Embroidery



Treasury of Ornament050

French Renaissance Carpet Painting



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French Renaissance Plastic Ornaments in Stone and Wood



Treasury of Ornament052

French Renaissance Ceiling Painting



Treasury of Ornament053

French Renaissance Weaving Embroidery and Book Covers



Treasury of Ornament054

French Renaissance Wall Painting,
Polychrome Sculpture, Weaving and Book Covers



More scans from Heinrich Dolmetsch's 'Der Ornamentenschatz' (1887) {The Treasury of Ornament}. [I'll probably add some notes to the last few images over the weekend I decided I was too lazy to do this. The second wind never came, as it were.]

I suspect the translational anomalies are becoming fairly obvious by now (I have the English publication; it's not me translating). It's reasonable to be at least mildly suspicious about the veracity of all the commentary, although I tend to consider the translation rather than the original as the transmitter of discord, as it were. I tried to verify some elements but, for the most part, I have simply attempted to report or interpret into plain English what I've been reading. And, as I am dumber than a stick at times, there may well be introduced errors in addition to any original inaccuracies. Just so you know.

Previously: Part I and Part II. The final entry in this series will appear in the next week or thereabouts.
Update: I've decided three is enough. But the whole book image series (including 20+ more images that weren't posted on the blog) is accessible from this flickr set.

UPDATE 2: Heinrich's book online: ENGLISH / GERMAN (thanks V.T.) Oct 2018

Friday, June 12, 2009

A Cabinet of Natural Curiosities

Albertus Seba y



wunderkammer: ostrich & porcupine



Albertus Seba cabinet of curiosities - anteater and mammal



7-headed hydra : Albertus Seba



preserved mammal species in jars



arachnids: spider species



armadillo, rat-like mammal + birds



snake and ibis-like bird



engraving of a sloth (wunderkammer)



snake and pangolin



frog and lizard - cabinet of curiosities



turtle or tortoise species engravings



18th century wunderkammer - frogs and snakes



frog, lizard, snake illustrations



Albertus Seba's cabinet - chameleon engravings



engraved plates of lizards - 1734



3-toed sloth and stylised ape figures



Albertus Seba - snakes and rat-like mammals



stylised alligator or crocodile



illustrated snake + lizard species - decorative design



mammal and bird drawings



Albertus Seba



goats and fanciful mammal sketches



stylised rat-like mammal sitting upright



anteaters and snakes



bird of paradise illustrations 18th century



birds nests



hatching alligator drawings



The images above come from Volume One of 'Locupletissimi Rerum Naturalium Thesauri' by Albertus Seba, 1734, newly available from the Missouri Botanical Garden's Botanicus website.

More than a hundred plates are accessible and can be individually downloaded in enormous jp2 image files. I have uploaded very large images to flickr, but the source site is the place to go for the 7000+ pixels-wide versions. We must thank blind luck for my even bothering to load this book; fairly obviously I can only look at a very small amount of material that passes across my screen and I didn't recognise the title. It was a totally random click.

I have posted a few plates from Seba previously and Mr H uploaded some photographs of other images a few years ago, but relatively few good quality scans from Seba's renowned publication have been easily accessible on the web before now. Two other sources I know of are: the University of Göttingen Volume I and Volume IV; and the Digital Library at Gdansk University of Technology appear to have a complete (microfilm) scan of the series. The quality of images at each of these sites is less than wonderful however. Let's hope Botanicus proceeds to digitise the remaining three volumes. There are more than four hundred plates in total.

"Albertus Seba's "Cabinet of Curiosities" is one of the 18th century's greatest natural history achievements and remains one of the most prized natural history books of all time.

Though it was common for men of his profession to collect natural specimens for research purposes, Amsterdam-based pharmacist Albertus Seba (1665-1736) had a passion that led him far beyond the call of duty. His amazing, unprecedented collection of animals, plants and insects from all around the world gained international fame during his lifetime. In 1731, after decades of collecting, Seba commissioned illustrations of each and every specimen and arranged the publication of a four-volume catalog detailing his entire collection-from strange and exotic plants to snakes, frogs, crocodiles, shellfish, corals, insects, butterflies and more, as well as fantastic beasts, such as a hydra and a dragon.

Seba's scenic illustrations, often mixing plants and animals in a single plate, were unusual even for the time. Many of the stranger and more peculiar creatures from Seba's collection, some of which are now extinct, were as curious to those in Seba's day as they are to us now."
That quote is taken from the Taschen site. They published an oversized (hand-coloured) facsimile version of Seba's 'Cabinet of Natural Curiosities' a few years ago and by all accounts it is a superb production. [Amazon page]

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

Grotesque Alphabet

Grotesque Alphabet 'A'

Ateone mutato in Cervo da Diana
Background: Actea Actaeon at right; Diana in the centre
Ateone mutato in Cervo da Diana
Atheonis transformed into a deer by Diana




Grotesque Alphabet 'B'
Penteo / Bacco Trionfante
Background: Bacchus carried by a procession
Penteo / Bacco Trionfante
Pentheus / The Triumph of Bacchus




Grotesque Alphabet 'C'
Cadmo mutato in Serpente con la moglie
Background: Cadmus being transformed into a serpent
Cadmo mutato in Serpente con la moglie
Cadmus is transformed into a serpent along with his wife




Grotesque Alphabet 'D'
Dedalo / Icaro
Background: Icarus is falling to earth
Dedalo / Icaro
Daedalus / Icarus




Grotesque Alphabet 'F'
Fetonte guisa il carro del sole
Background: A woman rides a chariot towards the sun
Phaeton, son of Helios, rides in his father's chariot
Fetonte guida il carro del sole
Phaeton drives the chariot of the Sun




Grotesque Alphabet 'H'
Hercole entrando nel'inferno Amazza Cerbero
Background: Hercules enters the inferno of Cerberus
Hercole entrando nel'inferno Amazza Cerbero
Hercules kills Cerberus at the entrance of Ades




Grotesque Alphabet 'L'
Licaone mutato in Lupo
Background: Licone [?] Lyacon* is transformed into a fox wolf
Licaone mutato in Lupo
Lycaon is transformed into a wolf




Grotesque Alphabet 'M'
Avaritia del Re Mida
Background: Scene depicting the greed of King Midas
Avaritia del Re Mida
The greed of King Midas




Grotesque Alphabet 'N'
Narcisso s'inamora de si stesso et dive ta un fiore
Background: Narcissus leans over a tomb set within a landscape
Narcisso s'inamora di se stesso et diventa un fiore
Narcissus falls in love with himself and turns into a flower




Grotesque Alphabet 'O'
Eccellenza d'Orfeo nel sonare et lametarsi
Background: Orpheus plays his lyre
Eccellenza d'Orfeo nel sonare et lametarsi
Orpheus’ great skill in playing and wailing
(lit., I think it’s what nowadays we’d call dramatic acting)




Grotesque Alphabet 'Q'
Quinto Curtio
Background: Marcus Curtius on horseback is about to leap into the chasm
Quinto Curtio
Quintus Curtius




Grotesque Alphabet 'R'
Rololo et Remo primi fondatori de Roma
Background: Romulus and Remus alongside a wolf
Romolo et Remo primi fondatori di Roma
Romulus and Remus, original founders of Rome




Grotesque Alphabet 'S'
Serena
Background: Serena swims in the sea




Grotesque Alphabet 'T'
Terseo unice il Minotauro et inganna Arianna
Background: Theseus and the minotaur's labyrinth
Teseo vince il Minotauro et inganna Arianna
Thesesu defeats the Minotaur and deceives Arianna




Grotesque Alphabet 'V'
Plutone / Venere et Cupido
Background: Venus and Cupid on a cliff; Pluto arrives in a chariot
Plutone / Venere et Cupido
Pluto / Venus and Cupid




Grotesque Alphabet 'Z'
Zarantani
Background: A city



This late 16th century suite of ornamental letters by Giacomo Paolini is known as 'Grotesque Alphabet in Mythological Landscapes'. The only thing I discovered about Paolini is that he was an Italian artist.

To discover which letters I've omitted and which letters were missing from the modern day alphabet, you will need to track them down at the source: the British Museum Prints Database (search on "Giacomo Paolini" in the 'free text' field)

The lazy link: Greek mythology.

**Update: Thanks to Giovanni for providing the translations above (in blue).

 
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