Weird coincidences and unsolved mysteries throughout history...
I have no idea what classic furniture is at this point! Can you walk us through keeping steady in the maelstrom and costly mistakes? How...
Découvrez l'album thématique d'Histoire par l'image.
Uno de los aspectos que distinguen la aparición de la moda en el vestir en los siglos XIV y XV, es la aparición en el traje de elementos que responden solamente a la fantasía y no a las necesidades…
Your virtual eye on illuminated manuscripts, rare books, and the stories behind them. By Franco Cosimo Panini Editore.
André Houot There is little to no info about this amazing illustrator online. A wiki page has a brief synopsis on him, but I was hard pressed to find any of his work for sale. Many of these piece…
Repasamos las grandes figuras que, en el siglo XV, hicieron de Florencia la meca del Quattrocento y del nuevo naturalismo.
I love to wear skirts! They are so versatile. You can mix and match them with blouses, sweaters, or pair them with jackets. They can be worn with tights and flats or tights and boots. You can change the look by simply changing your shoes from flats to stilettos. Because I love skirts, I am always on the look out for an interesting design and I've found a few that I thought you might like too! I wish I could see a complete front view of this skirt. But regardless, I really like the asymmetrical hem and the side seam welt pocket. A wrap skirt is always lovely. I love how they played with the pattern on this skirt. I'm sure you've seen this skirt on Pinterest. It's a very popular pin. But it derserves to be looked at again as it is such a lovely and dramatic design. Okay, we need Bunny of La Sewista for this one, especially since she is a smocking guru. I REALLY want to know how to do this!!! I don't care for the little buttons, but I do love the technique. Simple, yet so graceful. Here's another interesting wrap. I think this is so pretty. Look closely and you'll see that inside the center of the drape is a zipper. Sadly the zipper looks a bit off, but it's a great idea nonetheless. Since this skirt is in white, it's a little difficult to see, but if you look closely, you'll see that it has very interesting lines. What a lovely take on a pleated skirt. A cute take on a kilt design. This skirt makes me want to throw my sandals on and head for Bermuda!!! It just screams summer. I love how the scalloped edge was taken around the hem and then up the center back to accent the vent opening. Such a comfortable looking skirt. From Eileen Fisher. I believe that Marcy Tilton has a Vogue pattern that is quite similar. I love everything about this skirt. Take a striped fabric and add godets. Lovely. Now for a little comic relief ;) I'll say this, it's interesting!!! I have some fabulous surprises up my sleeve for you this week, so please be sure to check back. Also, the voting for the Get Your Motors Running Contest ends tonight so be sure to get your vote in if you haven't done so already. Have a wonderful day and a great week!!!! Rhonda
Your virtual eye on illuminated manuscripts, rare books, and the stories behind them. By Franco Cosimo Panini Editore.
Explore Andrea Carloni (Rimini)'s 44779 photos on Flickr!
Paris, 1 déc 2022 (AFP) – L’ailier du XV de France Damian Penaud (26 ans, 37 sél.) a été élu meilleur joueur des test-matches de la tournée de novembre, devançant l’arrière italien Ange Capuozzo et le troisième ligne néo-zélandais Ardie ...
Музыка в живописи XV – XVI века – женщины, мужчины, собаки, часть 1 Unknown (Master of the Female Half-Length Portraits) Three Ladies Making Music 1530-60 Jan Hermansz van Bijlert (Dutch painter, c 1597–1671) The Concert 1630s Gabriel Metsu (Dutch Baroque Era Painter, 1629-1667) Virginal Gerard…
Cuál es el misterio que Fausto oculta, por qué este mito o leyenda -historia real- ha causado tanto revuelo a lo largo de la historia, quizá aquella carga simbólica y sacrílega que traía consigo; e…
Jean-Honoré Fragonard's 'The Progress of Love' cycle
Why we don’t need to decode “the world’s most mysterious book.” Medieval manuscripts are survivors—of Viking raids, of damp and decay—but even with delicate, fragile pages and binding, many of them remain luminous, their vellum illuminated in gold and silver, embellished with vegetal and animistic imagery, and sketched through with the marginalia of generations of […]
Lucrecia se convierte en una modelo de los grandes pintores de la ciudad. Además fue escritora reconocida, y promovió alguna de las obras artísticas más importantes del Quattrocento de Florencia.
Have you ever noticed that when you start gathering together images as “proof” of whatever historical things you’re planning to sew that suddenly you start seeing things in the images you’ve never seen before? Yeah, it’s like that. Here we go, I’m working on a 15th century kirtle (or cotehardie, whatever you want to call it) and I’m tickled at…Continue Reading→
Искусство астрономии и геомантии. Тюбингенская домашняя книга /Tbinger Hausbuch. XV век, Вюртемберг. Тюбингенская домашняя книга /Hausbuch. Фрагмент листа 42v. Библиотека Тюбингенского университета, Германия. XV век, Вюртемберг / Tbinger Hausbuch: Iatromathematisches Kalenderbuch; die…
Before there was Grey's Anatomy, there was art!
Portrait of Madame de Pompadour and her brother, the Marquis de Marigny, who served as the director general of the King's Buildings.
Quando si pensa alla prima donna della storia si pensa ad Eva. Dal punto di vista cristiano è la verità. John William Waterhouse “Pandora”, 1896 Secondo la mitologia e la storia greca l…
Salvete, In my previous one entry on the Medieval dextrarius and his lesser friends war-horse-dextrarius-opertus , I attempted to introduce the subject of the so called knightly 'great horse.' I gave links to plenty many illuminations and paintings form High and Late Middle Ages showing those artists impressions of their great horse, palfrey, courses etc. So let us now turn the the one of the most important equestrian artwork of the XV century - the Cappella dei Magi in Florence Itally Magi_Chapel Gozzoli_magi . Painted by Benozzo_Gozzoli one of the most gifted 'equine' Medieval painters (and disciple of the famous Florentine painter of angels, Fra Angelico) for our purposes this series of frescoes is a cornucopia of images of a great horse and his lesser equine friends (because the true theme of the artwork is the glory of the Sforza family with some famous characters of the era Sigismodno Pandolfo Malatesta - below on a bay horse next to Galeazzo Sforza on white one, John VII Palaiologos on a grey horse above and in these sketches by Pisanello Sketches_of_John_VIII_Palaiologos Florence_in_1438 Pisanello ). Please note that both horses have bridles without a noseband, heavy curb-bit (but with short and curved shanks) and heavy, single reins. Galeazzo Sforza horse has jeweled pendant hanging from his browband. Here another Sforza rides a roan horse with a Eastern (Turkish or Byzantine) shabraque on his steed croup. The purpose of the shabraque is clear - it is to give support and protection to a wild cat sitting there. I daresay it is a cheetah and not a leopard, as these trained felines had been used exactly for that purpose - showy and fearsome display and for going hunting while riding to the spot behind his master. This tradition of employing 'horsed' cheetah is very ancient, being used by the nomads and rulers of Central Asia, spreading to Tang China in the east of Eurasia and to Islamic lands in the Northern Africa in the West. This collected roan horse and his comfortably mounted rider show high degree of schooling predating by more than a 100 years the world of Grisone and Renaissance manege schools, and they are intentionally performing for a viewer. Again no nose band on the bridle, single heavy reins and a curb-bit with glided round 'cheekpiece'. Here we have a great view of a croup and crouper position. The tail on this black horse is not docked, perhaps following the advice of Xenophon : 13. The haunches should be broad and well covered with flesh, that they may correspond to the sides and the chest; and if these parts are compact, they will be lighter for running, and render the horse much swifter. 14. If a horse has the thighs under the tail broad and not distorted, he will then set his hind legs well apart, and will by that means have a quicker and firmer step, a better seat for a rider, and will be better in every respect. We may see a proof of this in men ; for when they wish to take lip anything from the ground, they try to raise it by setting their legs apart rather than by bringing them together. 15. A horse should not have large testicles; but it is impossible to tell what will be the size of them in a colt. With regard to the pasterns of the hind legs, or shins, as well as the fetlocks and hoofs, we may make the same remarks as we made concerning the fore-legs. This rider sits comfortably, relaxed and in full control of his black horse, that has one white marking on his left hind hindleg. The one to this left, holding a chalice (?) uses one hand to control his bay horse, and his horse's bridle set follows the other horses. Note that this horse has a star on his wide forehead and one sock on his left foreleg. Finally white steed of Lorenzo il Magnifico, performing a parade walk or perhaps he is pacing. Guided with one hand and rather relaxed single but heavy reins, this horse has the most elaborate bridle and long-shanked gilded curb-bit. Stallion is looking at the road and does not appear to be in any way constrained nor fighting for control against the rider as in many modern dressage competitions. It is a beautiful view of a proud and powerful horse. One may ask what kind of horses are ridden here? Well, the issue of horse breeding in XV century Europe, here in Italy, is a bit complicated. Simply put we have no records of stud books and very few books on horse training written during this period. The Medieval Islamic world preserved many books of horse breeding, training and veterinary practices, but we cannot say that about the Christian Europe. It seems that ancient Roman works and later Byzantine copies of these works were copied by hand (no printing yet) and used. Yet from written sources and painting and illumination we can gather that in the early XV century Italy there was a type of horse that make constant appearance in the period paintings, eg Uccello etc. Later on the name used for the Italian horses was Neapolitan horse, extolled by many writers of Renaissance and Baroque. But as we know the Kingdom of Neaples wiki/Kingdom_of_Naples was a Spanish (Aragonese) realm from the end of the XIII century, and many already famous for their beauty and spirit Iberian horses/stallions must have been brought to the kingdom by the new rulers, along with Barb stallions imported from North Africa. By breeding Iberian and Barb stallions with the southern Italian mares, famous from antiquity and during the earlier Middle Ages, this Neapolitan horse was bred and then spread throughout the Italian Peninsula (in the early 1500 Italian prices Bona Sforza brought her husband, King Sigismund of Poland and Lithuania, many of these horses) and beyond. We know that from the ancient times all the way through late medieval period Northern Italy bred good horses ( eg. from Henry VIII of England records), and that later during the XV century northern city of Mantua was a great area of horse breeding in Italy. But the straight profile of Gozzoli's horses is different from more Roman-nosed profile ascribed to Neapolitan horse ( cited below by Blundeville), so as much these stallions are some of the greatest examples of Medieval Great Horse in art, we cannot say with certainty that they are of of Neapolitan 'breed' or horses of Neapolitan type bred. They actually do resemble the famous Roman or Greek horses of Saint Mark and a bit different from Ucello's ones, eg Paolo_Uccello_027.jpg , thus perhaps represent then existing Northern Italian type of great horse, bred by Sforza dukes and their allies in the Northern Italy. Last note should be on their size: none of these painted horses is taller than what 400 years later Cpt Horace Hayes prescribed for a war horse, no more than 15 hands (150-152cm) at withers. They are muscular and powerful but not tall in height. Their dimensions and relationship to their riders, painted by this Italian master, who most likely was very preoccupied with 'right' proportions and 'correct' perspective in his work, are in agreement with archaeological finds and surviving equine armor measurements. Therefore, in my opinion these horses, as presented in frescoes of the Cappella dei Magi, are true representation of the Great Horse of the first half of XV century.. I am going do a separate entry on the horses of Uccello, the painter of Medieval war horse. Let us part with Thomas de Blundeville 's description of one of these Neapolitan steeds: " being both comelie and stronglie made, and of so much goodnesse, of so gentle a nature, and of so high a courage as anie Horse is, [...] a long slender head, the nether part whereof, taht is to say, from eies downward, for the most part is also somewhat bending like a Hawke's beak, which make him to rein with a better grace." .
Hendrik van Steenwijck the Younger (1580–before 1640), together with his father and teacher Hendrik van Steenwijck the Elder (ca. 1550–1603), became well
Ars moriendi, Provence, 15th century. Marseille, Bibliothèque municipale, ms. 89, fol. 64r