At the Morgan Library and Museum is a Preparatio ad missam manuscript (MS H. 6) with a full-page frontispiece depicting Pope Leo X:
Source |
This frontispiece faces the start of the text with a heading in gold against a blue background, a full border, and historiated initials:
Source |
and the fact that the manuscript is complete in 19 leaves, allows us to believe that it is the book recorded in an 18th-century inventory of the books in the pontifical sacristy, described as a "Canone à Preparazione di Leone X" with 19 leaves, and illuminated on the first, second, and all the other leaves (see Roger Wieck in The Painted Page: Italian Renaissance Book Illumination 1450–1550, no.4 p.56).
This is relevant for our purposes because the Morgan manuscript must have been en suite with that from which the Vassar-Wildenstein-Wildenstein-Antiquus cuttings come, as details of a few of its initials clearly show:
We see the same priest and the same leaded window, although instead of the red embroidered wall-hanging (see below) we seem to have a green painted walls decorated with the triple-feather device of Leo X. The initials in the Morgan manuscript show various stages in a priest's preparation for mass, while the Vassar, Wildenstein, and Antiquus cuttings show the performance of mass:
Vassar |
Vassar |
Wildenstein |
Antiquus |
It is possible to deduce a certain amount about the appearance of the cuttings' parent volume, and this will be the subject of a future post.
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