- Browse by Author
Browsing by Author "Lee, Jennifer"
Now showing 1 - 3 of 3
Results Per Page
Sort Options
Item Augustine and the Trinity vision in the Vita Sancti Augustini Imaginibus Adornata(2013) Slaymaker, Peter James Victor; Saak, Eric Leland; Whitchurch, Gail Gráinne; Lee, JenniferItem Portable Prototypes: Canterbury Badges and the Thomasaltar in Hamburg(MDPI, 2021) Lee, Jennifer; Herron School of Art and DesignPilgrims’ badges often depicted works of art located at a cult center, and these cheap, small images frequently imitated monumental works. Was this relationship ever reversed? In late medieval Hamburg, a painted altarpiece from a Hanseatic guild narrates the life of Thomas Becket in four scenes, two of which survive. In 1932, Tancred Borenius declared this altarpiece to be the first monumental expression of Becket’s narrative in northern Germany. Since then, little scholarship has investigated the links between this work and the Becket cult elsewhere. With so much visual art from the medieval period lost, it is impossible to trace the transmission of imagery with any certainty. Nevertheless, this discussion considers badges as a means of disseminating imagery for subsequent copying. This altarpiece and the pilgrims’ badges that it closely resembles may provide an example of a major work of art borrowing a composition from an inexpensive pilgrim’s badge and of the monumental imitating the miniature.Item Remembering Pilgrimage in the Luttrell Psalter(2011-04-08) Lee, JenniferThis paper examines the theme of pilgrimage throughout the marginal imagery of the fourteenth-century Luttrell Psalter. Pilgrimage emerges as a prominent theme throughout the book's pages and suggests that its patron considered pilgrimage to be an important aspect of his devotional life. Textual evidence for Geoffrey Luttrell's actual pilgrimages supports this idea. This paper is also a demonstration of the benefits to scholarship afforded by the facsimile of the manuscript published in 2006, which allows access to the volume as a compete book rather than selected reproductions of a few well-known pages.