Description
This miniature comes from the French translation of a book by the Italian poet Giovanni Boccaccio (1313–1375). A compilation of biographies of famous women, Boccaccio’s work remained popular in France throughout the 1400s, especially with aristocratic bibliophiles, and was usually beautifully illustrated in the form of a deluxe manuscript. Shown here is the miniature introducing the chapter dealing with the legend of Queen Medusa. Surrounded by her courtiers, Medusa instructs the reader on the disadvantages of possessing wealth, which brings fear and superstition as well as loss of sleep, security, and peace of mind.
Provenance
Jacques d'Armagnac, Duc de Nemours; Lord Mostyn, London (sale July 13, 1920, no. 9; entire MS); Mme. Th. Belin, Paris (remainder of MS., sale Paris, 1936); Durlacher Brothers, New York.
Single Miniature Excised from Boccaccio's Des Cleres et nobles femmes: Queen Medusa and Her Court
c. 1470
Accession Number
1924.1015
Medium
tempera and gold on vellum
Dimensions
Sheet: 13 x 9.1 cm (5 1/8 x 3 9/16 in.)
Classification
Manuscript
Credit Line
Gift from J. H. Wade