FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Beyond Words: Italian Renaissance Books Exhibition to showcase Boston’s hidden Renaissance manuscripts On View: Sept. 22, 2016 to Jan. 16, 2017 Cristoforo Majorana, Penelope writing to Odysseus, in a late fifteenth-century Neapolitan copy of Ovid’s Heroides made for a member of the Aragon rulers of Naples. Harvard University, Houghton Library, MS Typ 8, f. 2v. BOSTON, MA (August 2016) – Rarely seen, exquisite Renaissance manuscripts and early printed books make this a once-in-a-lifetime exhibition. Beyond Words: Italian Renaissance Books showcases over 65 Renaissance paintings hidden between the covers of rare books in Boston’s libraries and museums. The works – remarkable for their beauty and jewel-like colors – will be on view at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston from Sept. 22 through Jan. 16, 2017. At the heart of the show is a remarkable trove of illuminated manuscripts from celebrated Renaissance libraries. Written, illustrated, and bound by the hands of leading artists for popes, princes, and scions of Italian dynasties, they were produced as one-of-a-kind luxury items. Complementing the painted manuscripts are books from the dawn of printing including Isabella Stewart Gardner’s own rare, first Florentine edition of Dante’s Divine Comedy illustrated by Botticelli and the first copy of this edition to enter an American collection. Additionally, the prayer book of Pope Julius III, long thought to be lost but recently identified by curator Dr. Anne-Marie Eze during preparations for the exhibition, will be on display for the first time in the United States. All of the books in the exhibition shed new light on Renaissance patrons, artists, scribes, and printers from an era when the art of bookmaking reached its pinnacle. The Gardner’s show is part of an ambitious city-wide collaborative project entitled Beyond Words: Illuminated Manuscripts in Boston Collections, which is the largest ever exhibition of medieval and Renaissance books held in North America. The Gardner joins Harvard University’s Houghton Library and Boston College’s McMullen Museum as one of three venues that will simultaneously display 260 outstanding painted and printed books selected by a team of local experts from 18 Boston institutions. Lenders to the show include the Boston Public Library, Museum of Fine Arts, and Wellesley College among many others. Gilded Age Bostonians such as Isabella Stewart Gardner brought most of these European treasures to America. They have scarcely been seen since, even by scholars. Dating from the 9th to 17th centuries, the books will be displayed thematically across the venues– the Humanist Library (Gardner), the Monastic Library (Houghton), and the Layman’s Library (McMullen). Their pages chart nearly a millennium in the history of European painting. Focusing on the Humanist Library, the Gardner’s exhibition reveals the key role of Renaissance scholar/book-hunters in the birth of the modern book in fifteenth-century Italy. The story unfolds in four sections: Study, Library, Chapel and Press. Study introduces the concept of humanism, a cultural movement that took off in Florence around 1400. Humanists believed that by reviving classical antiquity, they would usher in a new age of peace, prosperity, culture and religion in Italy. They searched monastery libraries in Europe for forgotten ancient Greek and Roman texts, which they painstakingly copied by hand into a new type of book. Portable, legible and elaborately illustrated, humanist manuscripts are the forefathers of books we use to this day. Library showcases relics from the magnificent libraries of Rome, Venice and other Italian states demonstrating how the humanist book aided the ruling class’s displays of learning, taste, and power. In Chapel, the exhibition highlights manuscripts used for public and private devotion, including giant choir-books made for the famous monastery of San Sisto in Piacenza and an impressive array of Books of Hours. The final section (Press) reveals how the arrival of the newly invented printing press in Italy in the late 1460s transformed book production. The Venetian book trade rapidly disseminated its products to a Europe-wide public, incorporating broad margins, legible typeface and cleaner layouts that essentially remain unchanged to the present day. “Many years in the making, Beyond Words is a unique collaboration between the city’s most prestigious academic and cultural institutions. It pays homage to the extraordinary visual beauty of books in Renaissance Italy, to Isabella Stewart Gardner, and to other prominent Bostonians, who brought these treasures to their city,” said Dr. Christina Nielsen, William and Lia Poorvu Curator of the Collection. “The most lavish manuscripts featured in Beyond Words reveal paintings on every page, constituting miniature museums. We are excited to be part of this rare opportunity to reveal these hidden artworks to the public.” To complement the broader exhibition, the Museum’s Vatachino gallery will feature Beyond Words: Gardner’s Literary World, a small selection of books, letters, and manuscripts related to Isabella Stewart Gardner’s contemporary reading habits. Gardner was an avid reader of nearly every genre, and she collected material evidence of her relationships - both imagined and actual - with the authors she admired. Through these letters and objects—a letter from T.S. Eliot, a photograph of George Sand by Nadar, a copy of The Scarlet Letter autographed by Nathaniel Hawthorne—her intellectual passions come vividly to life. The Gardner exhibition is organized by Drs. Anne-Marie Eze, former Associate Curator of the Collection, and Nathaniel Silver, Assistant Curator of the Collection. The manuscripts assembled in all three Boston exhibitions will be included in a single catalogue with contributions from 85 international scholars, edited by co-curators Jeffrey Hamburger, William P. Stoneman, Anne-Marie Eze, Lisa Fagin Davis and Nancy Netzer and published by the McMullen Museum. RELATED LECTURES AND PROGRAMS FOR THE EXHIBITION: Saturday, October 29, 11:30 am – 4 pm Dante Festival An Italian poet who lived in the late Middle Ages, Dante Alighieri is considered one of the most important and influential writers in the Western World. Isabella Gardner’s interest in the art and culture of Italy began with Dante, and her collection includes rare editions of his work. Join us for a day of creative exploration featuring art-making, music, readings, and participatory gallery experiences that will bring Dante’s words to life. Adults $15, seniors $12, college students $5, free for members, visitors under 18, and members of U.S. military and their families. Friday, November 4, 8:30 am Beyond Words Symposium Part of a three day symposium in collaboration with Harvard University’s Houghton Library and Boston College’s McMullen Museum, the other two venues for the collaborative exhibition Beyond Words: Illuminated Manuscripts in Boston Collections. Speakers include: Lillian Armstrong, Wellesley College, Wellesley; Ada Labriola, Independent Scholar, Florence; Francesca Manzari, “Sapienza,” Università di Roma; Christine Sciacca, J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles; Helena Szépe, University of South Florida, Tampa; and Frederico Toniolo, Università degli Studi di Padova. This is event is free and open to the public. Registration required. RSVP by October 28 by visiting here. Saturday, December 3, 3:30 pm A History of the Renaissance in Six Books Stephen Greenblatt, John Cogan University Professor of the Humanities at Harvard University; and Ramie Targoff, Professor of English, Jehuda Reinharz Director of the Mandel Center for the Humanities, and Co-Chair of Italian Studies at Brandeis University Enter the rich world of the Renaissance through six books in Beyond Words: Italian Renaissance Books that capture different aspects of this extraordinary period. The speakers will discuss, among other things, political life, religion, literature, humanism, exploration, and travel. Tickets are required and include Museum admission: adults $15, seniors $12, members free (must reserve in advance), college students $5. Thursday, January 12, 7 pm Beyond Gutenberg: Access in the 21st Century Anthony W. Marx, President of the New York Public Library Digital technology now enables us to imagine providing the full content of any book to anyone, anytime. Libraries can and should ensure that this becomes a reality, with the goal to unleash an explosion of learning and creativity. Tickets are required and include Museum admission: adults $15, seniors $12, members free (must reserve in advance), college students $5. Exhibition support is provided by The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation and the National Endowment for the Humanities. This exhibition also is supported in part by the Massachusetts Cultural Council, which receives support from the State of Massachusetts and the National Endowment for the Humanities, as well as by the Boston Cultural Council, a local agency which is funded by the Massachusetts Cultural Council, and administrated by the Mayor's Office of Arts and Culture. This exhibition is part of Beyond Words: Illuminated Manuscripts in Boston Collections, a three-venue collaborative exhibition with the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College and the Houghton Library at Harvard University. Media sponsor: The Boston Globe. The Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum - a work of art in totality - is a highly personal installation of Isabella Gardner’s collection, intended to fire the imagination of all who visit. Modeled after a Venetian palazzo, the galleries surround a verdant Courtyard and are home to masters such as Rembrandt, Raphael, Titian, Michelangelo, Whistler, and Sargent. The new Renzo Piano-designed wing provides an innovative venue for contemporary artists, musicians, and scholars. Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum • 25 Evans Way Boston MA 02215 • Hours: Open Daily from 11a.m. to 5 p.m. and Thursdays until 9 p.m. Closed Tuesdays. • Admission: Adults $15; Seniors $12; Students $5; Free for members, children under 18, everyone on his/her birthday, and all named “Isabella” • $2 off admission with a same-day Museum of Fine Arts, Boston ticket • For information 617 566 1401 • Box Office 617 278 5156 • www.gardnermuseum.org MEDIA CONTACTS DIANA BROWN MCCLOY TEAK MEDIA 978.697.9414 [email protected] SARAH WHITLING MARKETING ASSISTANT GARDNER MUSEUM 617.264.6061 [email protected]
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