Publication – Sarah Rigaudeau, « Le testament en droit canonique du XIIe au XVe siècle »

Pour les juristes français, les formes du testament sont le résultat d’une combinaison produite par l’influence du droit romain, des coutumes de l’ancienne France et de la législation révolutionnaire. L’apport du droit canonique à la formation du droit moderne et contemporain du testament, bien que majeur, est le plus souvent totalement passé sous silence. La réintroduction du testament au XIIe siècle est incontestablement due à la redécouverte du Corpus Juris Civilis. Cet ensemble fournit du procédé une définition particulièrement claire, l’entendant comme un acte de dernière volonté révocable. L’influence du droit romain, d’abord importante dans le Midi, a donc conditionné la diffusion de l’institution dans la pratique. Très tôt, cependant, s’est opéré un mouvement de simplification des formes exigées. La plupart des règles romaines sont écartées. L’Église n’exige en réalité aucune formalité, mais seulement des preuves de l’acte. Cette attitude très souple permet au plus grand nombre de tester, le plus souvent simplement par oral. Ouvrir à chacun une telle possibilité a bien sûr d’abord pour but de permettre à tous les chrétiens d’effectuer des legs pieux susceptibles, au-delà du rachat de leurs fautes, de venir enrichir le patrimoine ecclésiastique. Cette politique n’en débouche pas moins sur une promotion sans précédent de l’acte à cause de mort et de la liberté de disposer.

Docteur en histoire du droit et qualifiée aux fonctions de maître de conférences, Sarah Rigaudeau est actuellement chargée d’études documentaires aux Archives de Paris.

Informations pratiques :

Sarah Rigaudeau, Le testament en droit canonique du XIIe au XVe siècle, Paris, Institut Francophone pour la Justice et la Démocratie, 2021 (Thèses, 208). 576 pages, ISBN : 978-2-37032-328-6. Prix: 45 euros.

Source : LGDJ

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Publication – Yvette Vanden Bemden et Isabelle Lecocq, « The Stained Glass of Herkenrode Abbey »

The sixteenth-century glazing from Herkenrode Abbey in Belgium constitutes the most significant body of Flemish stained glass in the world. In the early nineteenth century, an English aristocrat took advantage of the secularization of the monasteries on the Continent to purchase the abbey church’s glazing; glass from the abbess’s private chapel was acquired by another English aristocrat.

This account of the glazing, the result of a unique and fruitful collaboration between the Corpus Vitrearum in Great Britain and Belgium, has sections on the three locations in England where the glass is now located – Lichfield, Shrewsbury, and Ashtead – prefaced by a historical introduction on Herkenrode Abbey. It benefits from extensive research into artistic practice in the Low Countries (for art-historical context), draws on the rich documentation in the Lichfield Cathedral archives (for the glass’s reception in England), and presents the insights gained during recent conservation of the glass at Lichfield Cathedral (for the glazing’s execution and condition).

Yvette Vanden Bemden, University of Namur, and Isabelle Lecocq, Royal Institute of Cultural Heritage, Brussels

Yvette Vanden Bemden is a researcher for the study of stained glass in Belgium for the publication of volumes of the Corpus Vitrearum. She is member and former president of the Belgian committee of the Corpus Vitrearum Belgique-België and a member of the Royal Academy of Sciences, Letters and Arts of Belgium.

Isabelle Lecocq is the chef de travaux at the Institut royal du Patrimoine artistique, Brussels, initially in the department for conservation/restoration, now in the Documentation Department – Art History Research and Inventory Unit. She is the Secretary of the Corpus Vitrearum Belgique-België; Secretary of The Royal Academy of Archaeology of Belgium; and a scientific collaborator to the University of Liège (Faculty of Philosophy and Letters, Department of Historical Sciences. Art History and Archaeology of Modern Times).

Table des matières :

National Committee of the Corpus Vitrearum (Great Britain)
National Committee of the Corpus Vitrearum (Belgium)
Foreword
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgements
Ground Plan of Lichfield Cathedral
Window Plan
Glossary
Note to the Reader
Abbreviations
Key to the Restoration Diagrams
Bibliography

GENERAL INTRODUCTION

The Former Abbey of Herkenrode and its Stained Glass
The Former Abbey of Herkenrode
The AbBey Church and Its Decoration
The Herkenrode Glazing: Material History and the Original Scheme
The Glazing of the Abbess’s Private Chapel
Glazing at Other Locations in the Abbey
Glazing from the Abbey Conserved in Belgium

I. LICHFIELD (STAFFORDSHIRE): LICHFIELD CATHEDRAL

History of Lichfield Cathedral from its Origins until the Civil War
The Anglo-Saxon Cathedral
The Romanesque Cathedral
The Gothic Cathedral
The Civil War

The Herkenrode Glass at Lichfield: Context, Acquisition, Installation, and Restoration
Introduction
The ‘Lady Choir’
Francis Eginton’s East Window
The Herkenrode Offer
Principal Figures Involved in the Planning
Evolution of the Plan
The Crucifixion Panels
The Herkenrode Glazing and the Lady Chapel
The Herkenrode Glazing Outside the Lady Chapel
The Burlison & Grylls Restoration in the Lady Chapel
The Camm and Winfield Restoration in the Lady Chapel
Restoration of Herkenrode Glass Outside the Lady Chapel
Other Late Nineteenth-Century Work
Camm’s Wartime Restoration

The Herkenrode Glass at Lichfield: Conserving the Lady Chapel Glazing
The Herkenrode Glazing
The Need for Conservation and Protection
Conserving the Glazing

The Herkenrode Glass at Lichfield: Historical and Art-Historical Analysis
Scholarly Interest in the Herkenrode Windows at Lichfield Cathedral in the Nineteenth Century
Locations of the Herkenrode Glazing at Lichfield
Condition and Authenticity
Marks, Glaziers’ Marks, and Inscriptions
Iconography
Technique
Dating
Style
Attribution

CATALOGUE

Windows in the Lady Chapel
Window I
Window nII
Window nIII
Window nIV
Window sII
Window sIII
Window Siv

Windows Outside the Lady Chapel
Window nVI
Window sVI
Window sXII
Window sXIII
Window sXV
Garland Panel

II. SHREWSBURY (SHROPSHIRE): CHURCH OF ST MARY

Architectural and Glazing Overview of the Church
The Herkenrode Glass at Shrewsbury
Catalogue: Part of St John from the Crucifixion Window at Herkenrode Abbey Church

III. ASHTEAD (SURREY): CHURCH OF ST GILES

Architectural and Glazing Overview of the Church
The Herkenrode Glass at Ashtead
Catalogue: The Crucifixion with St George, St Anne with the Virgin as a Child, and St Bernard

APPENDICES

Appendix 1. Description of the Medieval Glass in Lichfield Cathedral by Thomas Harwood
Appendix 2. Documents in the Aartsbisschoppelijk Archief (Mechelen, Belgium) Relating to Lambert Spulberch at Herkenrode
Appendix 3. Documents in the Rijksarchief (Maastricht, The Netherlands) Relating to Pierre Libotton’s Removal of the Herkenrode Abbey Church Glazing
Appendix 4. Documents in the Lichfield Cathedral Archive Relating to the Herkenrode Glazing and Its Context
Appendix 5. Genealogy of those Members of the de Lexhy Family Represented in the Herkenrode Glazing
Appendix 6. Locations at Lichfield Cathedral of Donors’ Arms
Appendix 7. Cold-Painting Applied by Barley Studio to the Herkenrode Glazing in the Lady Chapel at Lichfield Cathedral
Appendix 8. Glass Erroneously Attributed to Herkenrode

INDEX

Informations pratiques :

Yvette Vanden Bemden et Isabelle Lecocq, The Stained Glass of Herkenrode Abbey, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2021 (Corpus Vitraearum Medii Aevi: Great Britain). 624 Pages | Approx. 650 colour illustrations. 30 x 21 cm. ISBN : 9780197267189. Prix : GBP 160.

Source : Oxford University Press

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Web – La fabrique de la couleur. Artefacts, matière et cognition

Accès : ici

Ce carnet de recherche accompagne la réalisation des deux projets de recherche « La couleur : artefacts, matière et cognition » et « Fabrique matérielle du visuel » respectivement portés par la BnF et l’INHA. Il a pour objectif de relayer les travaux en cours dans le domaine des matériaux de la couleur (analyses physico-chimiques, outils de traitement des données d’analyses, ressources), en favorisant des croisements interdisciplinaires avec les sciences humaines et sociales (histoire de l’art, histoire, archéologie, linguistique, anthropologie).

Source : Couleur

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Appel à contribution – Reimagining the Medieval Double Monastery in Interdisciplinary Perspective

To be held at the Monastery of Admont in Steiermark, Austria, 14-16 October 2022.

The conference will bring together an interdisciplinary group of scholars with broad interest in dual-sex monasticism in the Middle Ages. The conference aims to put research on double monasteries on a new footing and to provide new perspectives in this not yet fully explored world.

The conference will be organized thematically, and we welcome abstracts for papers that focus on:

  • Theoretical Discourses and Ideological Justifications for Dual-Sex Monasticism: Theology, History, and Literature
  • Interaction, Interference, and Reciprocal Influence between the Sexes: Customaries, Rules, Liturgy, and Music
  • Coexistence, Collaboration, and Challenges between the Sexes: Archaeology, Architecture, and Art

The conference will mark the twentieth anniversary of Admont I — Manuscripts and Monastic Culture: Admont and the Twelfth-Century Renaissance (2002). Like Admont I, Admont II will emphasize collegiality and the informal exchange of ideas among colleagues of various disciplines, ranks, and career paths.

Participants are welcome to present in English or German. Each session will comprise two thirty-minute presentations, comments from an invited respondent, and an informal discussion.

Organizers: Alison I. Beach (University of St Andrews), Cristina Andenna (University of Graz), Father Prior Maximilian Schiefermüller (Librarian and Archivist, Stift Admont), and Karin Schamberger (Assistant Librarian, Stift Admont)

Submissions should include a brief abstract (max. 300 words) and a curriculum vitae.  Please use the following link to upload this material by March 31, 2022: https://form.jotform.com/213412914963355

Source : The Medieval Academy Blog

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Publication (en ligne) – The Canterbury Tales Project: Methods and Models (Digital Medievalist, 14, 2021)

From transcription to publication, thiscollection goes into details about the models that inform the Canterbury TalesProject Research. Each article engages with a specific aspect of the editorialprocess, starting with transcription and going through collation and analysis,and concluding with the management system and details about our most recentpublication, the CantApp: General Prologue, a reader’s edition designed formobile devices.

Although the articles focus on the work ofthe Canterbury Tales Project, they present a theoretical framework that canserve as illustration for other medieval and non-medieval projects. 

Table des matières et accès : ici

Informations pratiques :

The Canterbury Tales Project: Methods and Models, special issue of Digital medievalist, 14, 2021, online.

Source : Digital Medievalist

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Publication – « Reading Dante with Images: A Visual Lectura Dantis », dir. Matthew Collins

This volume contains an unprecedented meeting of two major traditions, each of which are forms of careful engagement with Dante’s Commedia: the Lectura Dantis, and the illustrations of this work. The Lectura Dantis, initiated by Giovanni Boccaccio in the fourteenth century, consists of a canto by canto study of Dante’s poem. The history of Commedia illustration has equally deep roots, as illuminated manuscripts of the text were being produced within decades of the work’s completion in 1321. While both of these traditions have continued, mostly uninterruptedly, for more than six hundred years, they have never been directly brought together. In this volume, Dante scholars take on a single canto of the Commedia of their choosing, reading not just the text, but also exploring the illustrations of their selected text to form multifaceted and multi-layered visual-textual readings. In addition to enlivening the Lectura Dantis, and confronting the illustrated tradition of the poem in a new fashion, these studies present a variety of approaches to studying not just the Commedia but any illustrated literary work through a serious inquiry into the words themselves as well as the images that these words have inspired.

Matthew Collins holds a PhD from Harvard University’s Department of Romance Languages and Literatures. He has published, among other things, on the reception history of Dante’s Commedia in illuminated manuscripts, drawings, and early printed illustrations, as well as later literary receptions of the work, including the influence of Dante on Giacomo Leopardi and Bob Dylan.

Table des matières :

MATTHEW COLLINS
Experimenting with Traditions

K.P. CLARKE
Inferno 1: Openings and Beginnings

GIANNI PITTIGLIO
Inferno 6: Una fiera crudele e tanto diversa. Cerberus Illustrated in the Early Manuscripts and Incunabula of the Divine Comedy

MICHAEL PAPIO
Inferno 10: Heretics in Fiery Tombs

PETER S. HAWKINS
Inferno 26: Tongues on Fire

CHRISTIAN Y. DUPONT
Inferno 33: The Power of Grief

SILVIA ARGURIO
Purgatorio 2: The Angel on the Water

DARIO DEL PUPPO
Purgatorio 5: An Experimental Visual Interpretation

ARIELLE SAIBER
Paradiso 28: Entruthing the Image

SANDOW BIRK
Accidental Dantista: Los Angeles is Not Hell, New York is Not Paradise

ROBERT BRINKERHOFF
Una selva oscura: Midlife and Metaphor

BARRY MOSER
On Illustrating the Divine Comedy

Informations pratiques :

Reading Dante with Images: A Visual Lectura Dantis, dir. Matthew Collins, Turnhout, Brepols, 2021. 416 p., 8 b/w ill. + 224 colour ill., 220 x 280 mm, 2021 ISBN: 978-1-912554-50-8. Prix : 150 euros.

Source : Brepols

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Publication – « Middle Ages without borders: a conversation on medievalism / Un Moyen Âge sans frontière », dir. Tommaso di Carpegna Falconieri, Pierre Savy et Lila Yawn

This book presents the proceedings of the international conference “The Middle Ages in the Modern World,” held in Rome November 21-24, 2018. Attended by more than a hundred participants of different ages, educational backgrounds, and places of origin, the conference constituted a landmark in the study of medievalism: the historical discipline, now in full bloom, that investigates the ways in which the thousand-year period between 500 and 1500 was, and continues to be, presented, reconstructed, and imagined in successive eras. The book opens with a substantial bibliography drawn from all of its components, followed by the seven keynote lectures and ninety-three shorter texts – abstracts of the individual conference papers – organized along eight thematic pathways, which together provide a vivid image of the current state of the field.

Table des matières : ici

Tommaso di Carpegna Falconieri is Associate Professor of Medieval History at the University of Urbino. He works on the history of central Italy, political medievalism, and historical method.

Pierre Savy is Director of Medieval Studies at the École française de Rome. His research focuses on Northern Italy in the late Middle Ages (political society, Jewish communities).

Lila Yawn is Associate Professor and Director of the Master of Arts in Art History at John Cabot University. She researches illuminated manuscripts and Rome in the Middle Ages.

Informations pratiques :

Middle Ages without borders: a conversation on medievalism, dir. Tommaso di Carpegna Falconieri, Pierre Savy et Lila Yawn, Rome, École française de Rome (Collection de l’École française de Rome, 586). 232 p., ill. coul. ISBN: 978-2-7283-1493-5. Prix: € 25.

Source : École française de Rome

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Appels à contribution – La sigillographie médiévale en Catalogne et dans les territoires de la Couronne catalano-aragonaise dans un contexte européen / La sigillographie féminine dans l’Europe méditerranéenne catalano-aragonaise et angevine

À l’occasion du centenaire de la publication du deuxième volume de la Sigil·lografia catalana de Ferran de Sagarra, membre de l’Institut d’Estudis Catalans

BARCELONE (INSTITUT D’ESTUDIS CATALANS), 9-11 NOVEMBRE 2022

LA SIGILLOGRAPHIE MEDIEVALE EN CATALOGNE ET DANS LES TERRITOIRES DE LA COURONNE CATALANO-ARAGONAISE DANS UN CONTEXTE EUROPEEN

NAPLES (UNIVERSITÀ DEGLI STUDI FEDERICO II), 23-24 NOVEMBRE 2022

LA SIGILLOGRAPHIE FEMININE
DANS L’EUROPE MEDITERRANEENNE CATALANO-ARAGONAISE ET ANGEVINE

Appel à comunications / Call for papers

Entre 1916 et 1932 étaient publiés les 5 volumes d’un ouvrage fondamental de l’historiographie catalane et de la sigillographie du premier tiers du XXe siècle : Sigil.lografia catalana. Inventari, descripció i estudi dels segells de Catalunya de Ferran de Sagarra i de Siscar (1853-1939), membre de l’Institut d’Estudis Catalans. Le deuxième volume vit le jour en 1922. À cette occasion, l’Institut d’Estudis Catalans, sous la direction de Xavier Barral i Altet, et l’Université de Naples Federico II, sous la direction de Vinni Lucherini, organisent deux colloques internationaux de sigillographie médiévale. Le cadre géographique n’est pas limité à la Catalogne ; il s’étend à l’Europe méridionale méditerranéenne et aux territoires de l’ancienne Couronne catalano-aragonaise, ainsi qu’aux échanges européens. Les colloques seront ouverts à tous les aspects de la sigillographie, royale, nobiliaire, ecclésiastique, urbaine, etc. Par Études comparatives on comprend aussi bien les relations entre la Catalogne, l’espace méditerranéen et l’Europe, que les études comparatives entre disciplines, sigillographie, histoire, histoire de l’art, littérature, liturgie, archéologie ou numismatique. On accueillera avec plaisir les contributions sur les collections ou les personnalités du collectionnisme de sceaux médiévaux, depuis le Moyen Âge jusqu’à aujourd’hui. À Barcelone seront présentées les questions générales, monographiques ou comparatives, tandis qu’à Naples on se concentrera sur les sceaux féminins. Les colloques produiront deux publications complémentaires à Barcelone et à Naples. Le présent appel à communications demeurera ouvert jusqu’au 30 janvier 2022. Les candidats sont priés d’envoyer à l’adresse de courriel congressegells2022@gmail.com un titre et un résumé de la communication proposée ensemble avec un bref curriculum vitæ. Les frais de voyage et de logement seront à la charge des communicants acceptés. L’organisation prendra à sa charge, en revanche, tous les frais collectifs, repas et pause-café, les publications issues des colloques, ainsi qu’un ensemble de publications qui seront offertes aux participants.

English version

Between 1916 and 1932 a fundamental work in Catalan historiography and sigillography of the first quarter of the 20th century was published: Sigil·lografia catalana. Inventari, descripció i estudi dels segells de Catalunya in five volumes by Ferran de Sagarra i de Siscar (1853-1939), member of the Institut d’Estudis Catalans. The second volume appeared in 1922. To mark the centenary of this publication, the Institut d’Estudis Catalans, under the direction of Xavier Barral i Altet, and the University of Naples Federico II, under the direction of Vinni Lucherini, are organizing two international conferences on medieval sigillography. The geographical framework is not limited to Catalonia but extends to southern Mediterranean Europe and the territories of the ancient Catalan-Aragonese Crown, as well as their European connections. The conferences will be open to all aspects of sigillography: royal, noble, ecclesiastical, urban, etc. For Comparative Studies we understand the relationships of Catalonia with the Mediterranean area and Europe, as well as the disciplinary relations between sigillography and history, art history, literature, liturgy, archaeology, and numismatics. Contributions on collections and collectors of medieval seals from the Middle Ages to the present day will also be considered. This call for papers will remain open until January 30th, 2022. Applicants are kindly requested to send a title and a summary of the proposed paper, together with a short curriculum vitae, to the e-mail address: congressegells2022@gmail.com. The proposals will be evaluated, and the applicants will receive an answer by February 2022. Travel and accommodation expenses will be at the charge of the participants. The organization will cover lunches and coffee breaks, as well as the final publications and a series of books that will be offered to the participants.

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Publication – « La cathédrale Saint-Pierre de Rennes. VIe-XXIe siècle. Un panthéon religieux pour la Bretagne », dir. Jean-Yves Andrieux

Dans la brillance de ses ors restitués en 2014, la cathédrale Saint-Pierre de Rennes abrite une sublime lumière eucharistique. Nouvelle basilique paléochrétienne, elle conserve un discret air d’Italie qui porte sur ses murs la mémoire de la dévotion mariale au temps de Vatican I. La litanie de ses saints, le culte voué à sainte Anne sont les chapitres d’un livre ouvert sur l’histoire de la Bretagne. Après l’inauguration en 2019 de son trésor dont la pièce maîtresse est un exceptionnel retable anversois, elle est aussi un grand musée de l’art français et flamand.

Avec le soutien de la région Bretagne, de la ville de Rennes, du ministère de la Culture, de l’Association diocésaine de Rennes et de la SAHIV.

Table des matières :

  • La cathédrale des premiers temps (VIe-XIIe siècle)
  • La cathédrale gothique (1180-1533)
  • La cathédrale des temps classiques (1541-1704)
  • La cathédrale reconstruite (1704-1816)
  • La cathédrale palladienne (1816-1846)
  • La cathédrale romaine (1847-1891)
  • La cathédrale des temps modernes (1881-1995)
  • La cathédrale restaurée (1995-2019)

Informations pratiques :

La cathédrale Saint-Pierre de Rennes. VIe-XXIe siècle. Un panthéon religieux pour la Bretagne, dir. Jean-Yves Andrieux, Rennes, Presses universitaires de Rennes 2021. 480 p. ISBN : 9782753517738. Prix : 69 euros.

Source : Presses universitaires de Rennes

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Publication – « Harmony in Bright Colors. Memling’s God the Father with Singing and Music-Making Angels Restored », éd. Lizet Klaassen et Dieter Lampens

Includes a CD with a compilation of representative fifteenth-century musical pieces performed on reconstructed versions of the instruments shown in Memling’s panels.

Hans Memling’s God the Father with Singing and Music-making Angels formed the upper register of an enormous polyptych painted for the Benedictine monastery of Santa Maria la Real in Nájera, Spain. The three large panel paintings are undoubtedly among the most monumental works of early Netherlandish painting. Since 1895 they have belonged to the collection of the Royal Museum of Fine Arts Antwerp (KMSKA), where a team of conservators and scholars have devoted themselves in recent years to their complex conservation.

To mark the completion of this project, the KMSKA organized a symposium in March 2017 in cooperation with the University of Antwerp. This latest volume in the Me Fecit series publishes the contributions presented on that occasion. Their wide-ranging themes include the commissioning and iconography of the panels, their acquisition by the museum, the depicted vestments and what the work has to tell us about fifteenth-century musical practice. Close attention is paid to technical aspects such as the materials and the painting technique used for the panels, Memling’s underdrawing, the frames, and the conservation treatment – not least the oxalate-containing layer that posed the greatest challenge. There is a musical aspect to the project too: precise replicas have been made of the depicted instruments, which were then used to perform fifteenth-century compositions with playing techniques inferred from the paintings.

The book features contributions by Maryan Ainsworth, Wim Becu, Till-Holger Borchert, Bart Fransen, Ingrid Goddeeris, Catherine Higgitt, Lizet Klaassen, Louise Longneaux, Karel Moens, Lisa Monnas, Keith Polk, Marie Postec, Marika Spring and Geert Van der Snickt.

Table des matières :

Introduction
Elsje Janssen

Chapter 1
The Conservation and Restoration of Memling’s God the Father with Singing and Music-Making Angels
Lizet Klaassen and Marie Postec

Chapter 2
Hans Memling’s Altarpiece for the Benedictine Abbey Church of Nájera
Bart Fransen and Louise Longneaux
Appendix: Libro Segundo de Censos, Nájera

Chapter 3
From Nájera to Antwerp: How Memling’s God the Father with Singing and Music-Making Angels Ended Up in Belgium
Ingrid Goddeeris

Chapter 4
Materials and Painting Technique of Memling’s Nájera Panels
Lizet Klaassen, Marie Postec, Geert Van der Snickt, Marika Spring

Chapter 5
The Frames and Framing of Memling’s Nájera Panels
Marie Postec and Lizet Klaassen

Chapter 6
Memling’s Preliminary Working Stages: The Nájera Panels in Context
Maryan W. Ainsworth
Appendix: Characterizing the Underdrawing Material in the Virgin and Child with Saints Catherine of Alexandria and Barbara
Sophie Scully and Silvia A. Centeno

Chapter 7
Memling’s Workshop
Till-Holger Borchert

Chapter 8
Memling’s God the Father with Singing and Music-Making Angels: Oxalate Formation in Old Master Paintings
Catherine Higgitt

Chapter 9
Vestments and Textiles in Memling’s Nájera Panels in Context
Lisa Monnas

Chapter 10
Music and Musical Instruments in Memling’s God the Father with Singing and Music-Making Angels
Karel Moens

Chapter 11
Memling and the Bruges Civic Ensemble circa 1480
Keith Polk

Chapter 12
The Musical Experience of the Nájera Panels. Paradisi porte : Memling’s Angelic Concert circa 1480
Wim Becu

Bibliography
Photographic Acknowledgments

Informations pratiques :

Harmony in Bright Colors. Memling’s God the Father with Singing and Music-Making Angels Restored, éd. Lizet Klaassen et Dieter Lampens, Turnhout, Brepols, 2021 (Me Fecit, 12). 287 p., 30 b/w ill. + 220 colour ill., Music CD, 300 x 240 mm. ISBN: 978-2-503-58028-9. Prix ; 100 euros.

Source : Brepols

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