The first (above) caught my eye because I recognised the style: the illumination is attributable to the so-called Almagest atelier, and it reminds me of some leaves in a private collection I am currently cataloguing, which have a number of their illuminated initials cut out.
At first glance one might not notice what has been done to leaves from this volume:
but if you look more closely, the excision of an initial, and its repair with another piece cut from the same manuscript, becomes apparent:
[click to enlarge] |
[click to enlarge] |
and yet the II Maccabees initial remains intact on one of the private collection leaves:
[EDIT 15 Nov. 2017: The Mortimer Brandt cutting is now in Colorado: see Julia Boffey and A. S. G. Edwards, Medieval Manuscripts in the Norlin Library & the Department of Fine Arts at the University of Colorado at Boulder: A Summary Catalogue (Fairview, NC, 2002), p. 29 (MS 325) and pl. 1.]
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The second Walters example consists of two cuttings from one or more Bible Historiale manuscript, one of which, showing the Expulsion from Paradise, is in the now-familiar style of Richard de Montbaston:
Lilian Randall, in her catalogue of the French manuscripts at the Walters, does not provide a reproduction of this cutting (the image above is scanned from the Judith Oliver article), but does record the dimensions as 72×75mm, very similar to the dimensions reported for the Cain and Abel miniature discussed in a previous post: 72×80mm. This does not prove that they come from the same manuscript, but it seems likely.
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