Illuminated Caxtons and the Trade in Printed Books

Holly James-Maddocks
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Abstract

This article suggests that the illuminated initials and borderwork added to ten early printed books in England are attributable to a single illuminator, the ‘Incunables Limner’, an individual for whom there is circumstantial evidence that he specialized in the illumination of printed books. Five of these books are copies of William Caxton’s Golden Legend (Westminster, 1483–84), while the other five are Continental imprints (two from Strasbourg, and one from each of Basel, Verona, and Parma) printed between 1476 and 1484. In addition, a second illuminator can be identified in a sixth copy of Caxton’s Golden Legend, working to the same design as that employed within the five copies decorated by the Incunables Limner. The possibility is considered that books illuminated by the Incunables Limner were products of Caxton’s overseas trade, and that it was through acting in this capacity that the artist’s specialization was viable. The Continental books are explored for what they might imply about Caxton’s wider book-selling strategies, and three with evidence for early English ownership are selected for particular attention.
彩绘书柜与印刷书籍贸易
这篇文章认为,在英国早期的十本印刷书籍中添加的发光的首字母和边框可以归因于一个单独的照明者,“不可思议的Limner”,有间接证据表明他专门从事印刷书籍的照明。其中五本书是威廉·卡克斯顿的《黄金传奇》(威斯敏斯特,1483-84)的副本,而其他五本书是1476年至1484年间印刷的大陆印本(斯特拉斯堡两本,巴塞尔、维罗纳和帕尔马各一本)。此外,在卡克斯顿的《黄金传奇》的第六本中,可以发现第二个照明器,其设计与《不可思议的Limner》装饰的五本相同。有一种可能性被认为是由“不可思议的Limner”照亮的书籍是卡克斯顿海外贸易的产物,并且正是通过这种能力,艺术家的专业化才得以实现。探究大陆的书籍可能暗示着卡克斯顿更广泛的图书销售策略,其中有证据表明早期英国人拥有的三本书被特别关注。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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