Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Legacies of Early European Art In Australian Collections
- 2 Heaven and Earth: the Worlds of the Rothschild Prayer Book
- 3 The Rothschild Prayer Book As Political, Social and Economic Agent Through the Ages
- 4 ‘Women Who Read Are Dangerous’: Illuminated Manuscripts and Female Book Collections In the Early Renaissance
- 5 Medieval Parchment: Two Glossed Bible Books In Context
- 6 Beginnings and Endings: the Shaping of the Book of Hours
- 7 An Associate of the Jouvenel Master and the Breviary of Prior François Robert
- 8 Chrysalis to Butterfly: An Aspect of the Evolution of the Book of Hours From Manuscript to Print
- 9 The Sorbonne Press and the Chancellor’s Manuscript
- 10 Thielman Kerver’s Book of Hours of 10 September 1522 In The Kerry Stokes Collection
- 11 An Accessory of Intellect: A Renaissance Writing Casket From The Kerry Stokes Collection
- 12 ‘A Very Rich Adornment’: A Discussion of the Stokes Cassone
- 13 The Dormition of the Virgin Altarpiece From the Kerry Stokes Collection
- 14 Through the Son: Pieter Brueghel the Younger’s Crucifixion
- 15 The Kerry Stokes Schembart Book: Festivity, Fashion and Family In The Late Medieval Nuremberg Carnival
- Index
1 - Legacies of Early European Art In Australian Collections
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2021
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Legacies of Early European Art In Australian Collections
- 2 Heaven and Earth: the Worlds of the Rothschild Prayer Book
- 3 The Rothschild Prayer Book As Political, Social and Economic Agent Through the Ages
- 4 ‘Women Who Read Are Dangerous’: Illuminated Manuscripts and Female Book Collections In the Early Renaissance
- 5 Medieval Parchment: Two Glossed Bible Books In Context
- 6 Beginnings and Endings: the Shaping of the Book of Hours
- 7 An Associate of the Jouvenel Master and the Breviary of Prior François Robert
- 8 Chrysalis to Butterfly: An Aspect of the Evolution of the Book of Hours From Manuscript to Print
- 9 The Sorbonne Press and the Chancellor’s Manuscript
- 10 Thielman Kerver’s Book of Hours of 10 September 1522 In The Kerry Stokes Collection
- 11 An Accessory of Intellect: A Renaissance Writing Casket From The Kerry Stokes Collection
- 12 ‘A Very Rich Adornment’: A Discussion of the Stokes Cassone
- 13 The Dormition of the Virgin Altarpiece From the Kerry Stokes Collection
- 14 Through the Son: Pieter Brueghel the Younger’s Crucifixion
- 15 The Kerry Stokes Schembart Book: Festivity, Fashion and Family In The Late Medieval Nuremberg Carnival
- Index
Summary
Abstract
Australia has rich collections of medieval and early-modern European art. Although not always well known outside the country, they are the legacy of a strong tradition of private and public collecting and bequests. This essay is intended as an introduction to this history, from the Felton Bequest of the early twentieth century, to the recent acquisitions of the Kerry Stokes Collection. It also introduces the legacy of art history around the Herald Chair of Fine Arts at the University of Melbourne, as well as the major themes and subjects of the rest of the book.
Keywords: Art Collecting, Australia; Kerry Stokes Collection; Felton Bequest; Medieval art; Renaissance art; Herald Chair of Fine Arts
The objects discussed in this book are likely to surprise many people. Most of them were featured in an exhibition called An Illumination: the Rothschild Prayer Book and Other Works from the Kerry Stokes Collection, c.1280–1685, held at the University of Melbourne in late 2015. The sixty-one objects exhibited ranged from manuscripts to stained glass and panel paintings, and were drawn from one of the great private collections of European medieval art: the Kerry Stokes Collection of Perth, Western Australia. Many of the essays here began as public lectures associated with the exhibition, while others developed in response to the objects presented and their links to other artworks in local and national collections.
At the centre of the exhibition was one of the most extraordinary European manuscripts that has come down to us. The Rothschild Prayer Book runs to 254 folios and was written and illuminated by the most important Netherlandish artists of the early sixteenth century; individual leaves were done by Gerard David among others (Figure 1.1). The manuscript has been linked to the immediate circle of Margaret of Austria, daughter and sister of Holy Roman Emperors, Regent of the Netherlands, and an important patron of art in general and of manuscripts in particular. But its exact patronage and date of production are uncertain. It is one of a cluster of beautiful and lavish manuscript books created for the highest court circles of sixteenth-century Europe.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Antipodean Early ModernEuropean Art in Australian Collections, c. 1200–1600, pp. 23 - 32Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2018