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Books > Arts & Architecture > Antiques & collectables > Books, manuscripts, ephemera & printed matter
The Book of Kells is the richest and most copiously illustrated
book of in the Celto-Saxon style that still survives. However,
despite its rarity and fame, there is little that is known about
it. Reproducing over sixty of the wonderful images from the book
itself, this guide describes the hidden meanings behind the
illustrations and opens our eyes to the history behind them.
Picking out the most interesting, beautiful and unique images from
the 339 vellum leaves that comprise the book as a whole, it gives
an illuminating insight into the manuscript and its creation. This
book will appeal to everyone from the hundreds of thousands of
people visiting the Book of Kells at Trinity College Dublin every
year, to those interested in history, art, ancient artefacts or the
gospels and anyone with a passion for beautiful objects.
One of the most important Italian manuscripts in the Getty Museum,
the lavishly illustrated Gualenghi d'Este Hours was created around
1649 on the occasion of the marriage of diplomat Andrea Gualengo to
Orsina d'Este, a member of Ferrara's ruling family. The devotional
manuscript featured brilliant figured decoration of the
suffrages--short prayers to saints--and was created by Taddeo
Crivelli, one of the most important manuscript illuminators of the
Renaissance.
This volume includes reproductions of all the illuminations in the
original manuscript plus selected text pages, each with commentary.
Kurt Barstow examines the book's vivid devotional imagery in
relation to works of art of the period that help explain the Hours
significance for the fifteenth-century patrons. This beautifully
illustrated book is published to coincide with an exhibit featuring
the manuscript that will take place at the Getty Museum from May 9
to July 30, 2000.
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