Monthly Archives: November 2011

Patron Interview: Krysta Black on doing research with manuscript facsimiles

The 10th century in Spain was a hectic time to create an illuminated manuscript.  In the south, the Umayyad Caliphate ruled from Cordoba, while in the north, a series of kings attempted to define themselves and their struggling kingdoms.

Art History PhD candidate Krysta Black, who recently sat down with me to talk about her research, feels that this climate of social upheaval helps to explain some of the odd quirks about her manuscript of choice: the Leon Bible of 960.

The Leon Bible of 960

The Rare Book Collection's facsimile of the Leon Bible of 960, on display at an event in the Art Library on Nov. 9th.

Krysta described one of her first experiences studying the facsimile of the Leon Bible, which is held in the Rare Book Collection in the Wilson Special Collections Library:

“… one of the things that I noticed that I hadn’t really gotten from any of the literature on the manuscript, was the way in which certain books of the Bible were far more heavily illustrated than others.   Because it’s something that is really striking when you’re actually leafing through the book.  You’re like ‘Okay, I’m going through Genesis, there are a couple of little illustrations, that’s cool, that’s cool…’ I get to Exodus and the book just explodes!” 

Since then she has been exploring, among other issues, the connection between the heavy illustration of the Book of Exodus–a book entirely focused on the escape from slavery–and the political climate at the time.

Krysta emphasized not only that she could not have made this discovery without the facsimile, but also just how much the facsimile helped to dictate her future course of study.  In choosing a manuscript to work with, she gravitated toward those works the UNC libraries had available in facsimile form.

Krysta Black speaking on her chosen manuscript.

Krysta Black in action, presenting the facsimile of the Leon Bible of 960.

“So, Rare Books had recently acquired a facsimile of the Leon Bible of 960, the most densely illustrated bible before the year 1000.  After looking at what books the UNC collection had, I saw that and said ‘Okay, that’s what I’m going to work on.’  I would say that the collection here directed me to what I studied rather than the other way around.”

Much like Professor Chatterjee noted in my previous interview, Krysta has discovered that manuscript facsimiles provide a way to connect with the experience of the book as it was originally intended, and to learn from that experience:

“I think working with facsimiles really facilitates being able to study those experiential aspects of manuscript illustration.  Whereas, if you’re just dealing with excised images, you’ve completely lost the entire context of what the book is about. ”

The audience enjoying firsthand experience with manuscripts at the Art Library facsimile event.

Finally, there is the issue of access.  To Krysta, facsimiles are important not only for the ways in which they open up new avenues of thought about the manuscripts, but also the ways in which they bring the user one step closer to actually accessing the original–which can be very difficult.

“I studied in Spain to do just that, and even when you gain access to these  things you have maybe a couple of hours with them.  So, [working with the facsimile in the library] helps you to prepare for actually getting to see the real thing. But also if you can’t make it to see the real thing the facsimile is, of course, the next best thing. ”

Krysta, along with Professor Dorothy Verkerk, gave us a great introduction to “the next best thing” when they gave a facsimile talk in the Art Library on November 9th.  With the generous assistance of the Rare Books Collection they were able to present the Leon Bible facsimile in the Art Library in all its glory.  Keep following us here to learn of more such events in the future as well as for further interviews!

– Eva Sclippa

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Filed under Events, Illuminated manuscripts, Manuscript facsimiles, Patron interviews, Special collections in the Art Library

Coming up on Tuesday, Nov. 15th: Hanes Visiting Artist lecture by James Elkins

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Event details:
“Farewell to Visual Studies”
James Elkins
Tuesday, November 15
Hanes Auditorium, Hanes Art Center
6:00 pm

James Elkins is the E.C. Chadbourne Professor in the Department of Art History, Theory, and Criticism at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. As a student he studied at the University of Chicago where he first earned a graduate degree in painting, and then switched to earn a PhD in art history.

Dr. Elkins’ writing focuses on the intersection between the study and practice of art as he explores the history and theory of images.  Some of his books are exclusively on fine art (What Painting Is and Why Are Our Pictures Puzzles?, for example). Others include scientific and non-art images, writing systems, and archaeology (e.g. The Domain of Images and On Pictures and the Words That Fail Them), and some are about natural history (How to Use Your Eyes).

Elkins’ talk at UNC will be titled “Farewell to Visual Studies.” In it, he will explore the rapid growth of visual studies as an intellectual field at colleges and universities throughout the world.  Visual studies have at least four different forms in North America and the UK, in Scandinavia and German-speaking countries, in Latin America, and in China and Taiwan. However, despite its range, one has to wonder: are visual studies really asking the most interesting questions?  The discipline has not fulfilled its initial promise as a means to study visuality and visual practices of all sorts, and it has not consolidated a common set of purposes or methods. Why look only at the same handful of theorists? Why exclude non-Western art or scientific images? Elkins will survey the original purposes of the field and its current condition, and will suggest several reasons why it may be time to say farewell to visual studies.

To find out more about James Elkins’ thoughts on visual studies as well as his broader body of work, take a look at his many books in the library’s online catalog. His many publications can make it difficult to tell where to start, so here are a few recommendations:

Visual Studies: A Skeptical Introduction. New York: Routledge, 2003.

What Happened to Art Criticism? Chicago, Ill.: Prickly Paradigm, 2003.

On the Strange Place of Religion in Contemporary Art. New York: Routledge, 2004.

Pictures & Tears: A History of People Who Have Cried in Front of Paintings. London: Routledge, 2001.

Pictures of the Body: Pain and Metamorphosis. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press, 1999.

The Object Stares Back: On the Nature of Seeing. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1996.

– Laura Fravel

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Facsimile Talk Wednesday, Nov. 9

Join us at the Sloane Art Library this week for another facsimile talk!

This week’s talk will feature Professor Dorothy Verkerk and PhD. candidate Krysta Black as they speak on the Ashburnham Pentateuch and the Leon Bible of 960.  Both speakers will be presenting facsimiles of their respective manuscripts from the Rare Book Collection in Wilson Special Collections Library.  As it is a facsimile event, this will be a hands-on experience, so be sure to come have some “face time” with these manuscripts.

Again, the information is:
Wednesday, 6 pm
November 9th
Sloane Art Library

Hope to see you there!

-Eva

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Filed under Events, Illuminated manuscripts, Manuscript facsimiles