The idea of cutting up a medieval manuscript is almost unthinkable today. Historically, however, this practice was relatively common, and it reached a fever pitch in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. People cut up manuscripts for various reasons: Dealers unwilling to pay weight-based import duties on large choir books opted to remove their decorated initials and dispose of the heavy bindings. Art lovers excised pictures from manuscripts and pasted them into albums; many considered this an act of freeing precious artworks from the text-filled books that held them captive. The dismembering of manuscripts was thus regarded not as vandalism but as a tribute to the otherwise hidden illuminations.
Showcasing some of the Morgan’s finest single leaves, this installation seeks to explore the myriad factors that fueled the frenzy of manuscript cutting, and the creative ways in which cut-out miniatures were subsequently displayed.
This installation is organized by Emerald Lucas, Belle Da Costa Greene Curatorial Fellow, Department of Medieval and Renaissance Manuscripts.
Lower Level