Among the most important polychrome enamel cycles produced in Limoges in the first half of the 16th century, the one attributed to the Aeneid Master, deduced from the engravings conceived by Sebastian Brant for Johann Grüninger’s printed edition (1502), constitutes a unicum of exceptional importance, not just for the articulation and complexity of the iconographic program, for the absolute preciousness of the result and for the cultural references, but also because it is set at a crucial moment in the history of the applied arts, in the transition between the ancient late-Gothic taste and the new Renaissance instances. First transposition on enamel of a profane subject, this cycle has aroused great interest since the end of the 19th century, but, although widely cited in art-historical literature, surprisingly it has never been the subject of any specific study except that of Marquet de Vasselot dating back at the beginning of the 20th century. The recent discovery in Friuli of one of these enamels, of which traces had been lost for more than a century, is an opportunity for an analysis of the cycle and to deepen the relationship between the Virgilian text, the engraving model and the translation on enamel.

Una machina narrativa di luce e colori: il ciclo a smalto del Maestro dell’Eneide

Francesco Fratta de Tomas
2023-01-01

Abstract

Among the most important polychrome enamel cycles produced in Limoges in the first half of the 16th century, the one attributed to the Aeneid Master, deduced from the engravings conceived by Sebastian Brant for Johann Grüninger’s printed edition (1502), constitutes a unicum of exceptional importance, not just for the articulation and complexity of the iconographic program, for the absolute preciousness of the result and for the cultural references, but also because it is set at a crucial moment in the history of the applied arts, in the transition between the ancient late-Gothic taste and the new Renaissance instances. First transposition on enamel of a profane subject, this cycle has aroused great interest since the end of the 19th century, but, although widely cited in art-historical literature, surprisingly it has never been the subject of any specific study except that of Marquet de Vasselot dating back at the beginning of the 20th century. The recent discovery in Friuli of one of these enamels, of which traces had been lost for more than a century, is an opportunity for an analysis of the cycle and to deepen the relationship between the Virgilian text, the engraving model and the translation on enamel.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11390/1262826
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