Paris Club des Libraires de France, coll. "Histoire" 1961 1 vol. relié in-8, toile éditeur blanche illustrée d'une vignette en couleurs, rhodoïd, 411 pp. Edition illustrée de portraits, de scènes et de documents empruntés à l'art italien et à l'art français de la Renaissance. Tirage limité. Légère déchirure en bordure du rhodoïd. Sinon très bon état.
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Bel exemplaire des bibliothèques du duc de La Valliere et de William Beckford. Francfort, Johann Feyrabend for Theodor de Bry, 1597-1598-1600-1602 6 parties reliées en 2 volumes in-folio de: I/ (8) ff. dont 2 portraits à pleine page de Boissard et de Bry, 1 carte dépliante de l’Italie, 161 pp. ch. 163, (1) f.bl., (3) ff. dont 2 portraits à pleine page, 211 pp., 13 pp. d’index ch. 9, (1) f., (11) ff., 42 pp., 4 planches sur double page, 2 cartes dépliantes et 141 planches à pleine page; II/ (2) ff., (4) ff., 47 pp., (1) f., (9) ff., 375 planches à pleine page, 5 planches inédites reliées à la fin. Chaque partie comporte un frontispice gravé. La 5e partie a été reliée par erreur après la partie 6: ses planches viennent immédiatement après celles de la IVe partie, son titre-frontispice a été inséré entre le texte et les planches de la 6e partie, et ses 10 ff. de pièces liminaires placés tout à la fin du volume, quelques rousseurs dans la VIe partie. Maroquin rouge, triple filet doré en encadrement, dos à nerfs à fleurettes, fleurons et annelets dorés, tranches dorées. Reliure du XVIIIe siècle. 310 x 195 mm.
[video width="1842" height="1080" mp4="https://www.camillesourget.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/BOISSARD-1.mp4"][/video] Edition originale de l’un des grands livres sur Rome. Adams, B, 2331-32-36-38-39-41; Cicognara 3626 ; Graesse I, p. 475 ; Brunet I, 1069 ; Kissner 54; Schudt 715; Rossetti II, 1160. L’ouvrage eut une influence considérable parmi les historiens. Winckelman l’appréciait encore comme source d’information. Le troisième plan, celui de la Rome « moderne », gravé par de Bry en 1597, dérive du plan Brambilla-Vanaest de 1590, avec une présentation différente de la basilique Saint-Pierre. Les figures ont été dessinées par le poète et antiquaire bisontin J.-J. Boissard (1528-1602) qui avait passé sa vie à étudier les chefs-d’œuvre de l’ancienne Italie. Elles ont été gravées par son ami Théodore de Bry. Quelques planches de la deuxième partie sont dues au buriniste français Jacques Granthomme, dont la signature figure sur sept d’entre-elles ainsi qu’au frontispice (cf. Inventaire du Fonds Français XVIe, I, p. 452-454, nos 26-33). The Antiquitates romanae were intended to offer scholars and visitors to Rome a guidebook of the city’s ancient monuments while also highlighting its Renaissance glory with information on its spectacular archeological collections. Boissard stayed in Rome between 1556 and 1559, sketching drawings of the Eternal City’s numerous antiquities, and taking precious notes on the collections of antique statues, steles, bas-reliefs, and inscriptions displayed by cardinals, princes and aristocrats in their Roman palaces and gardens. His monumental work is therefore considered not only a valuable primary source, but also the most influential travel guide of Renaissance Rome, since Part I offers an itinerary for a four-day tour around the city. Further, the work testifies to the vastness of Boissard’s readings, as he frequently makes use of accounts and inventories compiled by other authors including Flavio Biondo, Pomponio Leto, Bartolomeo Marliani, Onofrio Panvinio, Fulvio Orsini, and Ulisse Aldrovandi. Illustration : 521 gravures à l’eau-forte, 6 frontispices, une carte d’Italie, 3 plans dépliants de Rome, deux portraits répétés quatre fois de de Bry et Boissard. «Les six grands volumes d'Antiquitates Romanae urbis de Boissard sont l'œuvre d'un artiste et d'un savant. L'artiste a le souci du trait, des physionomies et du positionnement du regard par rapport aux objets...» (Alain Cullière, Bibliothèque lorraine de la Renaissance, catalogue d'exposition, Metz, 2000, n° 100). Pièces jointes : 5 gravures : la première reproduit le tableau de Raphaël dans l’église Saint-Augustin de Rome, les deux suivantes des sculptures antiques et les deux dernières deux molosses en marbre du palais du cardinal Vitellio, découverts en 1558 près du Tibre, via Vitellia. Bel exemplaire des bibliothèques du duc de La Valliere et de William Beckford. Exemplaire du duc de La Vallière, puis de Beckford, revêtu, probablement par Derome, de reliures en maroquin rouge, caractéristiques de la bibliothèque ducale. L’illustration inédite comportant dans le second volume cinq planches supplémentaires a sans doute été insérée par le relieur à l’instigation du duc de La Vallière. Provenance : Louis-César de La Baume Le Blanc, duc de La Vallière (Paris, 1783, n° 5484, acquis par Née de la Rochelle), William Thomas Beckford (Londres, 1882, I, n° 1027 : 24 £ pour Ellis & White).
Un brillant témoignage sur les fêtes de la Renaissance, imprimé à Paris en 1597. De la bibliothèque Horace de Landau, avec ex-libris. S. l., 1597. In-4 de 24 planches gravées numérotées y compris le titre frontispice. Les planches 19 et 22 sont coupées au cadre et remontées. Ainsi complet. Demi-maroquin rouge à coins, dos à nerfs avec le titre et la date de publication frappés or. Reliure du XIXe siècle. 289 x 193 mm.
Édition originale fort rare illustrant les mascarades de la Renaissance, œuvre de Robert Boissard, dessinateur et graveur au burin né à Valence en 1570. Lipperheide, 3167 ; Brunet, I, 1070 ; Rahir, 331 ; Colas, 368 ; Cicognara, 1594 ; Graesse, Trésor de Livres rares, I, 475. Parent de Jean-Jacques Boissard, il a gravé d’après les dessins de celui-ci plusieurs des figures illustrant les Icones vivorum illustrium (Francfort, 1597). On lui doit, en outre, un portrait de Ronsard et un portrait d’Henri IV. Entièrement gravé, l’ouvrage est orné d’un titre dans un encadrement architectural, et de 23 planches dessinées par Jean-Jacques Boissard et gravées par Robert Boissard. La plupart ont été à l’époque rehaussées de couleur jaune. Le volume fut imprimé à l’époque de la grande vogue des mascarades. Généralement données dans les résidences royales, ces divertissements étaient essentiellement chorégraphiques. Ils avaient lieu dans une salle ayant la forme d’un « carré long », garnie sur les côtés de fauteuils ou de gradins, dans lesquels prenaient place le roi, sa famille et, selon leur rang, des courtisans. Une troupe de danseurs, conduite par un prince ou une princesse, accompagnée de quelques figurants, chanteurs et instrumentistes, paraissait au cours d’un bal, après avoir convenu d’un thème en rapport avec leurs déguisements et les entrées qu’ils exécutaient. Spectacles assez brefs, sans intrigue, ils pouvaient néanmoins comporter quelques décorations et même des machines. Mais généralement les représentations n’avaient lieu qu’avec des costumes auxquels on accordait le plus grand soin en dépensant pour eux des sommes aussi importantes que pour ceux des opéras. Les mascarades étaient organisées pendant le carnaval, au mois de janvier, février et mars, avant le carême, période de l’année durant laquelle s’exprimaient, selon des habitudes séculaires, plus de liberté et de fantaisie. Cette suite des mascarades qui a rendu célèbre le nom du graveur Robert boissard, n’est pas un simple recueil de « grotesques ». Ces couples maniérés aux visages caricaturaux sont accompagnés de légendes moralisatrices qui mettent ces inventions à mi-chemin entre les recueils de devises et d’emblèmes, si en vogue à l’époque, et ceux des proverbes, plus populaires, dans le genre de ceux de Lagniet (vers 1650). Bel exemplaire à grandes marges. Un brillant témoignage sur les fêtes de la Renaissance, imprimé à Paris en 1597. Provenance : de la bibliothèque Horace de Landau (1824-1903) avec son ex libris sur le contre-plat.
, Brepols - Harvey Miller, 2023 Paperback Pages: 532 pages,Size:230 x 280 mm, Illustrations:250 col., 6 musical examples, Language:English.*new. ISBN 9782503588568.
history of Renaissance music told through 100 artefacts, revealing their witness to the priorities and activities of people in the past as they addressed their world through music. SUBJECT(S) Renaissance Music (c. 1400-1600) Material culture Renaissance art history REVIEW(S) "Like a veritable pop-up book, The Museum of Renaissance Music surprises its readers with the multidimensional quality of its content. Presenting a hundred diverse objects organized in different themed rooms, Borghetti and Shephard?s volume offers readers the experience of walking through an imaginary museum where objects ?speak out? their complex web of allusion connecting texts, images and sounds. A veritable tour de force, this book brings history, art history, and musicology together to highlight the pervasive nature of music in Renaissance culture, and does so in a direct and effective manner that can be enjoyed by experts and amateurs alike." Martina Bagnoli, Gallerie Estensi, Modena "With imaginative verve, The Museum of Renaissance Music contributes to a current explosion of material studies whose cacophony remakes our understanding of the Renaissance via ?history by collage,? in this case understanding Renaissance musicking through the spatial affordances of the gallery with its multitude of ?rooms? (travels, psalters, domestic objects, instruments, and much more), rather than through the traditional edited collection. The results are mesmerizing, indispensable." Martha Feldman, University of Chicago "This imaginary museum of Renaissance music, through a collection of one hundred exhibits, returns a proper share of sonority to objects, images, artworks and spaces. A fascinating reference book, offering a transformative vision of music in Renaissance culture, from domestic space to the global dimension." Diane Bodart, Columbia University, New York "The high-quality reproductions together with the knowledgeable commentaries are a treat for the eyes and mind of the reader. An entirely new type of music history book, this wonderful volume will appeal to scholars, music lovers, and students alike." Melanie Wald-Fuhrmann, Max Planck Institute for Empirical Aesthetics, Frankfurt BIO Vincenzo Borghetti is Associate Professor of Music History at the University of Verona. He holds a doctorate in musicology from the University of Pavia-Cremona and in 2007?08 was a fellow of Villa I Tatti, The Harvard University Center for Renaissance Italian Studies in Florence. His research interests are centred on Renaissance polyphony and opera. His essays and articles have appeared in Early Music History, Acta musicologica, Journal of the Alamire Foundation, and Imago Musicae, among other journals, and in several edited collections. In 2019 he was elected to the Academia Europaea. Tim Shephard is Professor of Musicology at the University of Sheffield. He is the co-author of Music in the Art of Renaissance Italy (Harvey Miller, 2020), as well as numerous other books and essays on Italian musical culture in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. He currently leads the project ?Sounding the Bookshelf 1501: Musical Knowledge in a Year of Italian Printed Books?, funded by the Leverhulme Trust. SUMMARY This book collates 100 exhibits with accompanying essays as an imaginary museum dedicated to the musical cultures of Renaissance Europe, at home and in its global horizons. It is a history through artefacts?materials, tools, instruments, art objects, images, texts, and spaces?and their witness to the priorities and activities of people in the past as they addressed their world through music. The result is a history by collage, revealing overlapping musical practices and meanings?not only those of the elite, but reflecting the everyday cacophony of a diverse culture and its musics. Through the lens of its exhibits, this museum surveys music?s central role in culture and lived experience in fifteenth- and sixteenth-century Europe, offering interest and insights well beyond the strictly musicological field. TABLE OF CONTENTS ? I. The Room of Devotions Introduction (Matthew Laube) 1 Silence (Barbara Baert) 2 Virgin and Child with Angels (M. Jennifer Bloxam) 3 Madonna of Humility (Beth Williamson) 4 Virgin Annunciate (Marina Nordera) 5 The Prato "Haggadah" (Eleazar Gutwirth) 6 The Musicians of the Holy Church, Exempt from Tax (Geoffrey Baker) 7 A Devotional Song from Iceland (Árni Heimir Ingólfsson) 8 Alabaster Altarpiece (James Cook, Andrew Kirkman, Zuleika Murat, and Philip Weller) 9 The Mass of St Gregory (Bernadette Nelson) Psalters 10 Bernardino de Sahagún?s "Psalmodia christiana" (Lorenzo Candelaria) 11 The "??????????" of Abgar Dpir Tokhatetsi (Ortensia Giovannini) 12 A Printed Hymnal by Jacobus Finno (Sanna Raninen) 13 "The Whole Booke of Psalmes" (Jonathan Willis) ? II. The Room of Domestic Objects Introduction (Paul Schleuse) 14 Commonplace Book (Kate van Orden) 15 Knife (Flora Dennis) 16 Playing Cards (Katelijne Schiltz) 17 Cabinet of Curiosities (Franz Körndle) 18 Table (Katie Bank) 19 Statue (Laura Moretti) 20 Valance (Katherine Butler) 21 Painting (Camilla Cavicchi) 22 Fan (Flora Dennis) 23 Tapestry (Carla Zecher) Sensualities 24 Venus (Tim Shephard) 25 Sirens (Eugenio Refini) 26 Death and the Maiden (Katherine Butler) 27 Erotokritos Sings a Love Song to Aretousa (Alexandros Maria Hatzikiriakos) ? III. The Room of Books Introduction (Elisabeth Giselbrecht) 28 Chansonnier of Margaret of Austria (Vincenzo Borghetti) 29 The Constance Gradual (Marianne C.E. Gillion) 30 The Bible of Borso d?Este (Serenella Sessini) 31 The Jistebnice Cantionale (Lenka Hlávková) 32 The Saxilby Fragment (Lisa Colton and James Cook) 33 "Le Jardin de Plaisance et Fleur de Rhétorique" (Jane H. M. Taylor) 34 "Hypnerotomachia Poliphili" (Massimo Privitera) 35 Embroidered Partbooks (Birgit Lodes) 36 "Grande Musicque" Typeface (Louisa Hunter-Bradley) 37 Coat of Arms of Matthäus Lang von Wellenburg (Elisabeth Giselbrecht) 38 The Eton Choirbook (Magnus Williamson) 39 "Liber Quindecim Missarum" (Pawe? Gancarczyk) 40 "Les simulachres & historiées faces de la mort" (Katelijne Schiltz) Imagined Spaces 41 The Musical Staff (Jane Alden) 42 Deduit?s Garden (Sylvia Huot) 43 Arcadia (Giuseppe Gerbino) 44 Heaven (Laura ?tef?nescu) ? IV. The Room of Instruments Introduction (Emanuela Vai) 45 Lady Playing the Vihuela da Mano (David R. M. Irving) 46 Double Virginals (Moritz Kelber) 47 Horn from Allgäu (Martin Kirnbauer) 48 Inventory after the Death of Madame Montcuyt (Emily Peppers) 49 Girl Playing the Virginals (Laura S. Ventura Nieto) 50 Vihuela (John Griffiths) 51 Bagpipes (John J. Thompson) 52 Kös (Kate van Orden) ? V. The Room of Sacred Spaces Introduction (David Fiala) 53 The Basilica of the Santissima Annunziata, Florence (Giovanni Zanovello) 54 Hauptkirche Beatae Mariae Virginis, Wolfenbüttel (Inga Mai Groote) 55 A Sow Playing the Organ (Mattias Lundberg) 56 Ceiling with the Muses and Apollo (Tim Shephard) 57 St Katherine?s Convent Church, Augsburg (Barbara Eichner) 58 Misericord (Frédéric Billiet) 59 The Chapel of King Sigismund, Wawel Cathedral, Krakow (Pawe? Gancarczyk) 60 The Bell Founder?s Window, York Minster (Lisa Colton) 61 Organ Shutters from the Cathedral of Ferrara (Sophia D?Addio) 62 The Cathedral of St James, ?ibenik (Ennio Stip?evi?) 63 The Funeral Monument of the Princess of Éboli (Iain Fenlon) ? VI. The Room of the Public Sphere Introduction (Robert L. Kendrick) 64 Street Music from Barcelona (Tess Knighton) 65 African Musicians at the King?s Fountain in Lisbon (Nuno de Mendonça Raimundo) 66 Songs for Hanukkah and Purim from Venice (Diana Matut) 67 A Tragedy from Ferrara (Laurie Stras) 68 A Bosnian Gravestone (Zdravko Bla?ekovi?) 69 Morris Dancers from Germany (Anne Daye) 70 A Princely Wedding in Düsseldorf (Klaus Pietschmann) Cities 71 Mexico City ? Tenochtitlan (Javier Marín-López) 72 Dijon (Gretchen Peters) 73 Milan (Daniele V. Filippi) 74 Munich (Alexander J. Fisher) Travels 75 The Travels of Pierre Belon du Mans (Carla Zecher) 76 Aflatun Charms the Wild Animals with the Music of the Arghanun (Jonathan Katz) 77 Granada in Georg Braun?s "Civitates Orbis Terrarum" (Ascensión Mazuela-Anguita) 78 News from the Island of Japan (Kathryn Bosi) ? VII. The Room of Experts Introduction (Jessie Ann Owens) 79 Will of John Dunstaple, Esquire (Lisa Colton) 80 Portrait Medal of Ludwig Senfl (Birgit Lodes) 81 Zampolo dalla Viola Petitions Duke Ercole I d?Este (Bonnie J. Blackburn) 82 A Diagram from the Mubarak Shah Commentary (Jeffrey Levenberg) 83 Cardinal Bessarion?s Manuscript of Ancient Greek Music Theory (Eleonora Rocconi) 84 The Analogy of the Nude (Antonio Cascelli) 85 The Music Book of Martin Crusius (Inga Mai Groote) 86 The World on a Crab?s Back (Katelijne Schiltz) 87 Juan del Encina?s "Gasajémonos de huzía" (Emilio Ros-Fábregas) 88 Josquin de Prez?s "Missa Philippus Rex Castilie" (Vincenzo Borghetti) 89 The Elite Singing Voice (Richard Wistreich) ? VIII. The Room of Revivals Introduction (David Yearsley) 90 Instruments of the Middle Ages and Renaissance (Martin Elste) 91 Dolmetsch?s Spinet (Jessica L. Wood) 92 Assassin?s Creed: Ezio Trilogy (Karen M. Cook) 93 "Christophorus Columbus: Paraísos Perdidos" (Donald Greig) 94 A Palestrina Contrafactum ? Samantha Bassler 447 95 St Sepulchre Chapel, St Mary Magdalene, London (Ayla Lepine) 96 The Singing Fountain in Prague (Scott Lee Edwards) 97 Liebig Images of "Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg" (Gundula Kreuzer) 98 Das Chorwerk (Pamela M. Potter) 99 "Ode to a Screw" (Vincenzo Borghetti) 100 Wax Figure of Anne Boleyn (Linda Phyllis Austern) Notes on Contributors 477 Bibliography 487
Turnhout, Brepols, 2012 Hardback, X+320 pages ., 156 x 234 mm. Languages : English, Italian, Latin.*New. ISBN 9782503525242.
Moral philosophy, and particularly ethics, was among the most contested disciplines in the Renaissance, as philosophers, theologians, and literary scholars all laid claim to it, while an expanding canon of sources made the ground shift under their feet. In this volume, eleven specialists drawn from literature, intellectual history, philosophy, and religious studies examine the configuration of ethics and how it changed in the period from Petrarch to Descartes. They show that the contexts in which ethics was explored, the approaches taken to it, and the conclusions it reached make Renaissance ethics something worthy of exploration in its own right, in distinction to both medieval and early modern ethics. Particular attention is given to the development of new audiences, settings, genres (essays, dialogues, commonplace books, biographies, short fiction), and mediums (especially the vernacular) in ethical discussions, as well as the continuities with the formal exploration of ethics through commentaries. Renaissance ethics emerges as a highly eclectic product, which combined Christian insights with the Aristotelian and Platonic traditions while increasingly incorporating elements from Stoicism and Epicureanism. This volume will be of particular interest to students and researchers who wish to gain an overall view of how ethics developed throughout Europe in response to the cultural, historical, and religious changes between 1350 and 1650. TABLE OF CONTENTS Preface Introduction - David A. Lines Part I. Contexts Sources for Ethics in the Renaissance: The Expanding Canon - David A. Lines and Jill Kraye From Schools to Courts: Renaissance Ethics in Context - David A. Lines Renaissance Ethics and the European Reformations - Risto Saarinen Part II. Approaches and Genres The Method of Moral Philosophy in Renaissance Humanism - Eckhard Kessler Renaissance Readings of the Nicomachean Ethics - Luca Bianchi Morals Stored and Ready for Use - Ann Moss Informal Ethics in the Renaissance - Peter Mack Biography as a Genre of Moral Philosophy - Alison K. Frazier Part III. Themes Happiness - Antonino Poppi Passions for this Life - Sabrina Ebbersmeyer Virtue of the Prince, Virtue of the Subject - Ullrich Langer Epilogue: After Renaissance Ethics - Sabrina Ebbersmeyer Index
, Brepols - Harvey Miller, 2020 Hardcover, 315 pages ., 19 b/w ill. + 49 colour ill., 4 b/w tables, 178 x 254 mm,. ISBN 9782503588339.
Antwerp in the Renaissance offers new research results and fresh perspectives on the economic, cultural, and social history of the Antwerp metropolis in the sixteenth century. This book engages with Antwerp in the Renaissance. Bringing together several specialists of sixteenth-century Antwerp, it offers new research results and fresh perspectives on the economic, cultural and social history of the metropolis in the sixteenth century. Recurrent themes are the creative ways in which the Italian renaissance was translated in the Antwerp context. Imperfect imitation often resulted from the specific social context in which the renaissance was translated: Antwerp was a metropolis marked by a strong commercial ideology, a high level affluence and social inequality, but also by the presence of large and strong middling layers, which contributed to the city?s ?bourgeois? character. The growth of the Antwerp market was remarkable: in no time the city gained metropolitan status. This book does a good job in showing how quite a few of the Antwerp ?achievements? did result from the absence of ?existing structures? and ?examples?. Moreover, the city and its culture were given shape by the many frictions, and uncertainties that came along with rapid urban growth and religious turmoil. Bruno Blondé and Jeroen Puttevils are colleagues at the Centre for Urban History at the University of Antwerp. The research fields of Blondé include the history of transportation, economic growth and social inequality, material culture, retail and consumption of the early modern Low Countries. Puttevils works on the late medieval Low Countries and deals with topics such as mercantile and financial culture, the history of lotteries and how people thought about the future in the past. Table of Contents Antwerp in the Renaissance Bruno Blondé and Jeroen Puttevils Sixteenth-Century Antwerp, a Hyper-Market for All? The Case of Low Countries Merchants Jeroen Puttevils Antwerp Commercial Law in the Sixteenth Century: A Product of the Renaissance? The Legal Facilitating, Appropriating and Improving of Mercantile Practices Dave De Ruysscher Brotherhood of Artisans. The Disappearance of Confraternal Friendship and the Ideal of Equality in the Long Sixteenth CenturyBruno Blondé and Jeroen Puttevils Sixteenth-Century Antwerp, a Hyper-Market for All? The Case of Low Countries Merchants Jeroen Puttevils Antwerp Commercial Law in the Sixteenth Century: A Product of the Renaissance? The Legal Facilitating, Appropriating and Improving of Mercantile Practices Dave De Ruysscher Brotherhood of Artisans. The Disappearance of Confraternal Friendship and the Ideal of Equality in the Long Sixteenth Century Bert De Munck ?And Thus the Brethren Shall Meet All Together?. Active Participation in Antwerp Confraternities, c. 1375?1650 Hadewijch Masure A Renaissance Republic? Antwerp?s urban militia, ?the military Renaissance? and structural changes in warfare, c. 1566?c. 1621 Erik Swart A Counterfeit Community. Rederijkers, Festive Culture and Print in Renaissance Antwerp Anne-Laure Van Bruaene Literary Renaissance in Sixteenth-Century Antwerp? Herman Pleij Building the Metropolis Krista De Jonge, Piet Lombaerde, and Petra Maclot The City Portrayed. Patterns of Continuity and Change in the Antwerp Renaissance City View Jelle De Rock Trial and error. Antwerp Renaissance art Koenraad Jonckheere Silks and the ?Golden Age? of Antwerp