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Millard Meiss (1904–1975)

Author of The Visconti Hours : National Library, Florence

32+ Works 657 Members 1 Review 1 Favorited

About the Author

Millard Meiss (1904-1975), an authority on late medieval and Renaissance painting, taught at Columbia University and Harvard University in the course of a distinguished career. At the time of his death he was professor emeritus of the Institute for Advanced Study

Works by Millard Meiss

Giotto and Assisi (1960) 22 copies
Francesco Traini (1983) 3 copies

Associated Works

Les Belles Heures of Jean, Duc de Berry (1413) — Contributor, some editions — 244 copies, 2 reviews

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Reviews

This is a gorgeous volume, not quite a facsimile edition, but a richly reproduced selection of plates from one of the most lavishly illustrated Books of Hours. There is a brief but very informative introduction, which presents not only the manuscript itself, but the background of the Visconti family. It is always good to know background, especially with Books of Hours, as they tended to be customized for their owners, but in this case, the background adds immeasurably to the experience of the illuminations.

The Visconti family employed one of my favorite coats of arms: a basilisk devouring a human child. Not only is this a delightful commentary of the rather ruthless nature of the Italian clans in the middle ages, it survives today, on the front of every Alfa Romeo ever made. So it is particularly interesting that the Viscontis, and this Visconti in particular, motivated by an intense desire to legitimize his position (not quite legitimately attained) as Duke, saw fit to plaster that very insignia all over his personal prayer book, making it rather like a game of 'Where's Waldo," assuming of course, that Waldo is a suitable name for a child-devouring basilisk.

On a more serious note, however, the commentary which accompanies each plate makes this an excellent volume for the study of manuscript illumination, and of Books of Hours. If I have a quibble (and it is a minuscule one), it is that the metallic ink, intended to accent those areas which are embellished with gold leaf in the original, cannot begin to convey the glory to which it refers. I might almost prefer to have the unaccented image, lest the poor pigments available damn the original with faint praise. Then again, photographing gold leaf reliably is notoriously difficult, so perhaps the spot ink serves to clarify rather than dim, in which case, I am happy to have it.

In any case, this is a beautiful book, lovingly crafted with regard to both content and production. It's a volume that should appeal to those with artistic as well as historic interest in medieval manuscripts should not be without.
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Mithalogica | Feb 21, 2011 |

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