Emblem Books
Emblèmes et Devises
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Gordon 1548 .A54 no.1
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Emblem books were a best-selling genre during the
sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, in France and
throughout western Europe. In the emblematic format,
each symbolic illustration is accompanied by a brief
title or motto, an edifying verse epigram, and often
an additional explanatory text in verse or prose.
From these books we can learn much about the cultural
values and concerns of the reading public in Renaissance
France. Furthermore, the woodcut figures, as well
as the ornate typographical borders that often framed
the illustration or the entire page, provided decorative
themes for ornamentation of clothing, jewelry and
household furnishings.
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Gordon 1549 .A54
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In 1531, an Italian lawyer and scholar,
Andrea Alciato,
introduced the first book of emblems in Germany. His
epigrammatic verses in Latin on moral themes were
illustrated with woodcut figures on the initiative
of his Augsburg printer. Following Alciato’s
example, printers in Paris and Lyon published numerous
successful variations on the genre, first in Latin,
and then in the vernacular French.
Many of the moral themes addressed
in the emblems came from classical sources, such as
the Greek Anthology and Aesop’s Fables,
and from humanist sources, Erasmus’s Adages
in particular. Humanist interest in the Egyptian hieroglyphs
of Horus Apollo, and the subsequent urge to recreate
a pictographic language, directly linking symbol and
concept, further fueled the enthusiasm for emblems.
The genre was also adopted for religious ends,
in numerous Bibles figurées, and by
Georgette de Montenay
in her Emblemes et devises chretiennes. In
the realm of heraldry, the popular emblem format shaped
the published collections of Claude Paradin, whose Devises heroïques represent the individual and courtly form that replaced heraldic
blasons in fifteenth- and sixteenth-century France.
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Gordon 1571 .M65
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Gordon 1551 .P37
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Gordon 1543 .C67
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The Gordon Collection includes many beautiful and
important examples of the French Emblem book, including
those of Alciato
(in Latin and in French), Claude
Paradin, Guillaume
de la Perrière, Gilles
Corrozet, Barthélémy Aneau,
and numerous works that illustrate Biblical scenes(Holbein,
Maraffi,Simeoni) and mythological tales (La
Metamorphose d’Ovide figurée)
in an epigrammatic format. Also among the treasures
of the collection is the Blasons
anatomiques of 1543, an extremely
rare illustrated edition of emblematic poetry about
parts of the female body.
* * *
Emblem books have drawn much
scholarly attention in the past fifteen to twenty
years. Excellent studies on the French
emblem book in the Renaissance have been published
by Daniel Russell, Alison Adams, Alison Saunders,
and Stephen Rawles, among others, including the monumental
two-volume Bibliography of French Emblem Books
by Adams, Rawles and Saunders (Geneva: Droz,
1999).
The rise of Cultural Studies and interdisciplinary
research have undoubtedly contributed in recent years
to the growing scholarly interest in emblem books.
The influence of contemporary media culture and modern
advertising techniques have also heightened our appreciation
of these books that rely on popular iconography of
the Renaissance to produce the print version of a
“sound bite,” or slogans and jingles,
to convey a message.
Due certainly in large part to their
visual appeal, emblem books are the focus of several
groundbreaking digitization projects, notably those
underway at Glasgow University, the University of
Illinois, Penn State University, and Utrecht University
(URL’s listed below). Digital and Internet technology
are proving to be effective tools for reproducing
and comparing the many variations on similar themes
that recur in the emblem books published throughout
Europe in the Renaissance.
Internet Resources
Glasgow University Emblem Website
(This site provides an overview of many current projects
and includes references to numerous related sites
of interest.)--
http://www.emblems.arts.gla.ac.uk
Glasgow Centre for Emblem Studies - digitization
project--
http://www.ces.arts.gla.ac.uk/html/AHRBProject.htm
The University of Illinois – German
Emblem Books project--
http://images.library.uiuc.edu/projects/emblems/
Emblem Project Utrecht (Dutch Love Emblems)--
http://emblems.let.uu.nl/emblems/html/index.html
The English Emblem Book Project at the Penn
State University Libraries' Electronic Text Center--
http://emblem.libraries.psu.edu
Alciato's Book of Emblems: The Memorial Web
Edition in Latin and English--
http://www.mun.ca/alciato/
The Literary Encyclopedia entry on “Emblems
and Imprese, 1400-1700” (Essay by Claire
Preston, University of Cambridge)--
http://www.litencyc.com/php/stopics.php?rec=true&UID=325
The Society of Emblem Studies--
www.emblems.arts.gla.ac.uk/SES/
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