Recueil d'Arras

Portrait of Pierre Vasquez de Verdura, f301[1]
Folio 265

The Recueil d'Arras is a mid 16th century manuscript tentatively attributed to the Netherlandish artist Jacques Le Boucq.[2] It comprises 293 paper folios, of which folios 5–177, 179–293 and 271[3] contain 289 copies of drawn portraits of named historical people.

The book is named after the city of its current location, Arras in Northern France. It is not known who commissioned the book, or for what purpose.

Portraits

The drawings are arranged by family or region, beginning with members of the English, Scottish and French royal families, the Hainault family and court, the Blois, the dukes and duchesses of Burgundy and the court of the Spanish Netherlands. The portraits are followed by series of warriors, ecclesiastics, writers and finally notable heretics.[4]

The portraits including a self portrait by Hieronymus Bosch and a double portrait of Philip the Good and Charles the Bold, a copy of Jan van Eyck's Portrait of Baudouin de Lannoy and depictions of Anne of Burgundy and Margaret, Queen of Scots, all of whom are named in the index contained in folios 1–4, a later addition probably based on notes Le Boucq made on the margins which have since been cut away.[5] The only non-historical portraits are of (the unidentified) Laura and Petrarch on folio 27I verso. The drawing as are all on black or red chalk on paper. Nine are lost, while only torn fragments remain of a small number of others. It was originally foliated using Roman numerals, this was changed to Arabic numerals by a later scribe.[3]

  1. ^ Albert Châtelet and Jacques Paviot, Visages d'antan : le Recueil d'Arras (XIVe-XVIe siècle), Lathuile, Éditions du Gui, 2007 (ISBN 978-2-9517417-6-8 et 2-9517417-6-6), pp. 401 ; 410.

References

Notes

  1. Campbell, 24
  2. See Bouchot, 107–I3, 281–309
  3. 1 2 Campbell, 301
  4. Campbell, 302
  5. Campbell, 304

Sources

  • Bouchot, Henri. "Les portraits aux crayons des xvie et xviie siècles". 1884
  • Campbell, Lorne. Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes, Volume 40, 1977
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, April 22, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.