



A Tournament Contest from Tournament Book, about 1560–70, unknown illuminator, made in Germany. The J. Paul Getty Museum, Ms. Ludwig XV 14, fols. 27v–28

Manuscripts, stained glass, garments, tapestries, and other precious objects provide a window into the spectacles and social rules that governed life in European courts.

By Dr. Larisa Grollemond / 08.27.2018

Assistant Curator, Manuscripts Department

J. Paul Getty Museum

Introduction

Courtiers feasting at elaborately set tables, knights in gleaming armor, a richly clad monarch presiding over elegant festivities: such was life at the medieval and Renaissance courts of Europe. Monarchs and nobles affirmed their power and political authority through pageantry such as hunting, jousting, and banqueting. So too, the visual arts—illuminated manuscripts, paintings, drawings, enamels, and textiles—actively helped to construct a court’s political and cultural identity. Such trappings were meant to inspire awe, announcing the wealth and vitality of the kingdom not only to visiting dignitaries and rival princes but also to the monarch’s own subjects.

The exhibition All that Glitters: Life at the Renaissance Court (on view at the Getty Center from August 28 to December 2, 2018) presents a glittering array of objects from the courts of Europe ranging from illuminated manuscripts to luxury textiles and decorative arts. This post introduces several of the objects from the exhibition.

Socializing in Style

The court was a space of leisure, entertainment, and display. Members of the aristocracy spent their time in tournaments, hunting, feasting, and games such as chess, all in a sumptuous and visually captivating environment. Courtiers were served the finest food and drink in elegant vessels, while musical entertainment further enhanced the social theater. The spectacle delighted courtiers, but it was also intended to remind them of their monarch’s magnanimity. Manuscripts that recorded such courtly pastimes were valued as luxury goods.

The Hunt

Hunters Pursuing a Deer, about 1430–40, unknown illuminator, made in Brittany, France. Tempera colors, gold paint, silver paint, and gold leaf on parchment, 10 3/8 x 7 1/4 in. The J. Paul Getty Museum, Ms. 27, fol. 61v. Digital image courtesy of the Getty’s Open Content Program

Hunting was one of the most popular and exclusive leisure activities for courtiers. This lively image of a hunting party in pursuit of quarry appears in a popular manual on the subject. A series of stylized images reminiscent of tapestry depicts every aspect of the hunt, from types of hounds to methods of camouflage. Only nobility of the highest rank engaged in hunting, which was taken seriously not only as sport but also as an enactment of chivalric values and a confirmation of social hierarchies. Large parties of men and women engaged in hunting, often showing off the latest fashions in silk and fur.

Textiles

Luxury textiles were an important part of the courtly visual environment, and took the form of tapestries used as room decoration as well as clothing.

Armorial Millefleurs Tapestry, 1530–50, unknown illuminator, made in Belgium. Textiles, tapestries, wool, and tapestry weave, 67 × 79 × 3/4 in. Los Angeles County Museum of Art, 56.60.1, Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Kirkeby. Image: www.lacma.org

At the center of this tapestry is a complex armorial arrangement: statements of familial identity were literally woven into the households of the nobility. Many kinds of small flowers and plants are arranged around the central heraldic display on a dark ground, giving the impression of a verdant meadow.

This type of tapestry, called “millefleurs” (thousand flowers), was one of the most popular types of domestic textile among Europe’s elite. A signature feature of an elegant home, tapestries were often commissioned in sets and hung in an arrangement that created a unified visual impression. They also served the practical function of insulating large, drafty rooms.

Clothing was also a way for courtiers to show their high status, and fashion was a serious pursuit. For a stylish man at court in Jacobean England, for example, owning a pair of fashionable gloves was essential. The shape of the highly decorative pair below evolved from the gauntlets required by medieval knights to protect their hands and forearms during

combat. By this period, gauntlets were made of fabrics such as silk, velvet, or satin.

Pair of Man’s Gauntlets, 1625–50, unknown maker, made in England. Leather, silk, and gold metallic thread, silk satin; looped bullion embroidery, 14 1/4 × 7 3/4 in. Los Angeles County Museum of Art, 49.45.1a–b, Gift of Mrs. Margaret Isabel Fairfax MacKnight. Image: www.lacma.org

First owned by Thomas, Lord Fairfax (1560–1640), this pair of gloves is especially chic. It features supple goatskin glove-hands, tabbed cuffs, a scrolling floral motif embroidered in gold thread, and edges lined in gilt lace. The right to wear such gloves was the exclusive privilege of the nobility, protected by laws that regulated attire according to rank.

Codes of Conduct

Lords and ladies, and even kings and queens, observed strict rules of comportment, and a deeply ingrained sense of social hierarchy dictated every aspect of daily life. The adherence to chivalric code and the way it governed both belief and behavior at the Renaissance courts was established earlier in the Middle Ages, but emerged with renewed vigor during the late fifteenth century and continued throughout the Renaissance.

Rank determined a courtier’s physical proximity to the monarch, including where he sat at the banqueting table, as well as his right to wear certain luxury fabrics. Such protocols demanded a delicate dance of proper etiquette from courtiers, as well as vigilant attention to systems of heraldry expressing family connections, ownership of certain lands and territories, and membership in official military orders. In the exhibition, a number of dazzling and complex objects including manuscripts and stained glass explore the display of heraldry at court.

Genealogy

Genealogy, and the ability to trace one’s lineage back for generations into the medieval and even ancient world, was also of primary concern at court. It is reflected in this manuscript, which describes and illustrates the long line of the Hohenzollern family of Germany as a series of patriarchs centered under classical arches.

Eitelfriedrich I Hohenzollern, about 1572, Jörg Ziegler. Pen and ink, colored washes, tempera, and gold paint on parchment, 13 7/8 × 10 15/16 in. The J. Paul Getty Museum, Ms. Ludwig XIII 11, fol. 18. Digital image courtesy of the Getty’s Open Content Program

Eitelfriedrich I, Count of Hohenzollern (1545–1605), appears here, resplendent in a full suit of armor and framed by his family’s heraldic colors and symbols. The House of Hohenzollern traced its lineage to the eleventh century. This text, illustrated in the late sixteenth century, recounts the lives and deeds of the family’s patriarchs in the Holy Roman Empire, encompassing what is now Germany. The images present a portrait genealogy of the men within architectural settings that identify them as the inheritors of the glory of ancient Rome. Handed down through the family for generations, this record served as a continual reminder of an illustrious past.

Heraldry

Heraldry was one of the primary ways that people expressed their genealogy and official status at court, and their peers were highly adept at reading these complex arrays of personal and family symbols.

Frontispiece with Coat of Arms of Claude de Lorraine, Duc d’Aumale, about 1557, unknown maker, made in Paris, France. Tempera colors, 11 7/16 x 7 1/2 in. The J. Paul Getty Museum, Ms. Ludwig XIII 4, fol. 1. Digital image courtesy of the Getty’s Open Content Program

This manuscript, for example, contains a heraldic frontispiece that was added nearly 100 years after the book’s original production. The dukes of Normandy claimed descent from the Viking ruler Rollo, the first to govern their territory of Aumale in northwestern France.

Treasured manuscripts were passed down through generations of family members or acquired by collectors who added their personal marks. The family lineage and ancestral deeds recorded in the manuscript above, originally produced between 1400 and 1415, may have held particular meaning for Claude of Lorraine, a sixteenth-century Duke of Aumale: he appended this array of family symbols surrounded by the collar of the knightly Order of Saint Michael. The armorials accompany an inscription describing the “very virtuous and magnanimous” Duke Claude, celebrating the century-old tome as a worthy addition to his collection.

Saint George with the Arms of Speth, 1517, unknown maker, made in Germany. Pot-metal, colorless and flashed glass, vitreous paint, silver stain, and lead came, 21 3/8 x 18 1/4 x 3/8 in. The J. Paul Getty Museum, 2003.64. Digital image courtesy of the Getty’s Open Content Program

Decoration in aristocratic households was also mobilized to communicate heraldic messages. This small glass panel combines armorials of the noble Speth family of Mainz, Germany (three keys upon a shield), with their holy patron, Saint George, who appears in a full suit of armor.

Heraldic motifs displaying family lineage were a favored subject in stained glass panels, which featured a complex language of armorial symbols intelligible to courtly peers. For commissions by noble patrons, artisans created sophisticated illusionistic effects with vitreous paint and silver stain: the delicacy of Saint George’s curls and facial expression demonstrate the close relationship between glass painting and draftsmanship during the Renaissance.

Jousting

Few practices evoke the courts of Europe more vividly than jousting. By the late

medieval period, official tournaments had elevated the joust to an art form. These chivalric dramas provided displays of knightly prowess that captivated noble audiences.

Books like this one recorded in precise detail the participants, armor, and heraldry of contests held at courts throughout Europe. In this example, the artist captured a dramatic encounter between opponents, their lances about to crash into each other’s shields. The knights declare their allegiances through the colors they wear and the heraldic devices on the fabrics covering their horses.

Devotion and Display

In the palaces and châteaux of late medieval and Renaissance Europe, religious faith often found expression in luxurious material form. Noble patrons had commissioned illuminated prayer books to guide their devotions since the thirteenth century, and at the Renaissance court these luxurious manuscripts advertised wealth and good taste as well as piety. Sought-after court artists produced small illuminated books that could be worn as fashionable accessories, their decoration imitating the elegant fabrics, precious metals, and glittering jewels that adorned the residences of Europe’s elite.

Madonna of the Burning Bush, 1469–1508, Georges Trubert. Tempera colors, gold leaf, gold and silver paint, and ink on parchment, 4 1/2 × 3 3/8 in. The J. Paul Getty Museum, Ms. 48, fol 154. Digital image courtesy of the Getty’s Open Content Program

Georges Trubert, the official court artist to Duke René of Anjou, illuminated this striking image of the Madonna and Child surrounded by the flames of the Burning Bush. In a masterful display of three-dimensional illusionism, Trubert depicted the subject as an enamel plaque encased by a golden, jewel-encrusted frame hanging from a delicate chain that appears to pierce the parchment support. Duke René, presiding over his court in Anjou, was a close relation of the French monarch and an active patron and collector of art. The illuminations in this book provide glimpses of the precious metalwork he cherished, even though the objects themselves no longer exist.

Nativity and Annunciation to the Shepherds, about 1480–90, Master of the Baltimore and Orléans Triptychs. Polychrome enamel and gold on copper, 8 1/8 x 6 5/16 in. Los Angeles County Museum of Art, 51.13.4, William Randolph Hearst Collection. Image: www.lacma.org

Enamel, a medium that suggests the sheen of gold and the sparkle of jewels, flourished at the

Renaissance court. Fifteenth-century artists developed a technique for painting in enamel

directly onto small copper plaques. The master responsible for this small devotional plaque

produced a number of triptychs in the medium for patrons at the highest echelons, including

the king of France. The artist likely worked in illumination as well, which required similar stylistic techniques and incorporated many of the same devotional images, such as those in books of hours like the one by Trubert above.

Dangerous Glamour

The exhibition concludes with a display of illuminated manuscript leaves from the court of King Louis XIV at Versailles, where the splendor of European court life reached its apex in the seventeenth century. The display of heraldry, personal emblems, fine textiles, and luxury books continued to affirm social standing and good taste. Ultimately, the very trappings of magnificence that once cemented the king’s authority would help spark a revolution.

Despite the proliferation of printed works, individuals with the means to do so continued to commission illumination, a luxurious medium that was still prized in the collection of Louis XIV. Emblems—symbols that combined image and text—readily accommodated mottos, devices, and heraldry from earlier periods.

Left: Emblem for Louis XIV (fol. 17), about 1663–68, Jacques Bailly and Abbé Amable de Bourzeis. Gouache and gold on parchment, 15 5/16 × 10 1/8 in. The J. Paul Getty Museum, Ms. 11 (6). Right: Emblem for Louis XIV (fol. 5), about 1663–68, Jacques Bailly and Abbé Amable de Bourzeis. Guache and gold on parchment, 15 1/2 × 10 11/16 in. The J. Paul Getty Museum, Ms. 11 (4). Digital images courtesy of the Getty’s Open Content Program

Illuminated by the royal artist, the designs of these leaves may have been intended for incorporation into the borders of royal tapestries. The emblems contain a dense web of symbolic connections to the French crown, including the cockerel, a symbol of France itself, and the dolphin, a reference to the dauphin, the heir to the throne.

The array of objects that comprised the visual environment of the medieval and Renaissance courts of Europe might seem at home under glass, but these were things that members of the elite class used and encountered every day. As the curator of the exhibition, I hope these objects not only illuminate life at court in centuries past, but also encourage visitors to contemplate how spaces of leisure and luxury are created and communicated today.





Originally published by The Iris under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license.

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