Saturday, September 27, 2014

New Zealand Digital Art Entropy (19-20th C)

Costume design for Pageant of Empire [Indian dancer] - Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa
This costume sketch was originally designed by Mollie Rodie in 1940 for the Red Cross Pageant held in Wellington Town Hall on 18 September 1940. Mollie may have redrawn this sketch for the grand finale of the Victory Queen Carnival in Wellington Town Hall 3-5 June 1941, which featured the same pageant again. Pageants and queen carnivals were popular ways to raise money during World War II (1939-45).
Backhouse, John Philemon, 1845-1908 :Green walking twig. New Zealand. [ca 1880] - Alexander Turnbull Library
Stick insect seen from above
Trans-Antarctic Expedition (1955-1958) :Trans-Antarctic Expedition, patron H.M. the Queen. Share certificate 1956-58 ...
Certificate shows a map of Antarctica in the centre, penguins at the left, men with a ski sled at the right, and a photographic portrait of Sir Edmund Hillary below. The whole is bordered by a yellow "rope". The certificate is signed by Charles M Bowden on behalf of the Ross Sea Committee. The manuscript signatures of George Lowe and E P Hillary are at lower right
The Yellow Book - Auckland Libraries
Lane, John (Publisher), Date(s): 1894, 1895, 1896 and 1897...Showing four covers of 'the Yellow Book'. I was unable to find this books digitized this time...
[Kinder, John] 1819-1903 :The old Mission House (the Revd T. Chapman's) at the Ngae, Roturua, N[ew] Z[ealan]d. Jan[ua...
Single storey thatched roof house, with an outbuilding behind and to the left, viewed through trees. A large exotic tree, possibly a willow is growing to the right of and close to the house. This mission station was moved from Mokoia Island to Te Ngae, on the eastern side of Lake Rotorua in July 1840. The Reverend Thomas Chapman ran the station for a period then later shifted to Maketu.



Vast majority of posted images are online available at the artwork section of the DigitalNZ project (link provided)


Sometimes I move from strictly “ancient manuscripts” –which is my main leitmotif in facsimilium- to almost “contemporaneous” art pieces. I discovered today the amazing project “New Zealand digital content” and for sure I’ll be back to other sections of this site...

Thursday, September 25, 2014

Der Fechtkampf, 16th C. (Illustrated sword fighting manual)


16th century sword fight manuscript drawing - Combat Knights 7
16th century sword fight manuscript drawing - Combat Knights 4
16th century sword fight manuscript drawing - Combat training 6
16th century sword fight manuscript drawing - Combat training 7
16th century sword fight manuscript drawing - Combat training 5


Found this “manuscript” about sword fighting at State Library of Berlin, I provide direct link to the codex here
 
Said manuscript but there is no accompanying text, beyond occasional notes in some pages. Presumably it was intended as a training manual. Scenes are fairly narrow in terms of the weapons portrayed, with long swords, daggers and bucklers. Codex consists of about 140 pages, featuring ink and watercolour/ink-wash illustrations.

Saturday, September 13, 2014

Novae theoricae planetarum, 16th Century

Lawrence J. Schoenberg Collection: LJS 64 - [Illustrations to Georg von Peurbach's Novae theoricae planetarum]

Lawrence J. Schoenberg Collection: LJS 64 - [Illustrations to Georg von Peurbach's Novae theoricae planetarum] 

Lawrence J. Schoenberg Collection: LJS 64 - [Illustrations to Georg von Peurbach's Novae theoricae planetarum] 

Lawrence J. Schoenberg Collection: LJS 64 - [Illustrations to Georg von Peurbach's Novae theoricae planetarum]



I found this manuscript –has an amazing set of volvelles- at Penn Libraries , online available with tag LJS 64. The work is titled “Theoricae novae planetarum”, by 15th-century Austrian astronomer Georg von Peurbach, who taught at the universities in Padua and Ferrara

The diagrams demonstrate increasingly complex planetary motion (at least for 15th Century). The Theoricae Novae was an attempt to present Ptolemaic astronomy in a more elementary and comprehensible way. The book was very successful, replacing the older Theoricae Planetarum Communis as the standard university text on astronomy.

Von Peurbach was very precise taking in account 15th Century astronomy resources & instruments: In 1457 he observed an eclipse and noted that it had occurred 8 minutes earlier than had been predicted by the Alphonsine Tables, the best available eclipse tables at the time. He then computed his own set of eclipse tables, the Tabulae Eclipsium (remained highly influential for many years).

About this codex provenance, was formerly owned by Francesco Rolandi of Turin, teacher of mathematics (There is an inscription dated 1655, inside upper cover). After Francesco Rolandi, books had other owners but was finally sold by William Patrick Watson Antiquarian Books (London), cat. 7 (1996), no. 79, to Lawrence J. Schoenberg and Barbara Brizdle, 2011. (link to their manuscript initiative provided).