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Illuminated Manuscripts of Germany and Central Europe in the J. Paul Getty Museum

Thomas Kren

This beautifully illustrated volume explores the richness of the J. Paul Getty Museum's holdings in German and Central European manuscripts from the ninth to the eighteenth century.

The book features full-color reproductions of masterpieces from such works as Carolingian manuscripts of the ninth century; several sumptuously illuminated Ottonian texts from the late tenth and early eleventh centuries; two of the most celebrated examples of Romanesque illumination: the Helmarshausen Gospel book from the 1120s and the Stammheim Missal, made around 1170 for Saint Michael's monastery in Hildesheim; The Life of the Blessed Hedwig, from 1353; and the only known illuminations by the Cologne painter called the Master of Saint Veronica, from about 1400. It also illustrates many richly colored illuminations from such manuscripts as a luxury psalter made in Würzburg, dating from the mid-thirteenth century; a copy of Rudolf von Ems's Weltchronik, produced in the early fifteenth century; and chivalric and dynastic manuscripts from the sixteenth to the eighteenth century.

Thomas Kren is former associate director for collections and former senior curator of manuscripts at the J. Paul Getty Museum. He is coauthor and editor of Illuminating the Renaissance: The Triumph of Flemish Manuscript Painting in Europe (Getty Publications, 2003), which won the Eric Mitchell Prize for best exhibition catalogue in 2004.

 

132 pages
6 5/8 x 9 3/8 inches
110 color illustrations
ISBN 978-0-89236-948-5
paperback

Getty Publications
Imprint: J. Paul Getty Museum

2009

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