were medieval women artists? how do we know? /

Published at 2016-02-10 16:53:00

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In the subtitle for my book Ivory Vikings,I took a chance. I dropped all the qualifiers. Rather than cluttering up the cover of my book with "may enjoy" or "perhaps" or "maybe," I came out and said that a woman carved the Lewis chessmen.

The subtitle reads: "The Mystery of the Most Famous Chessmen in the World and the Woman Who Made Them."

So
me reviewers objected: "Though more full of conjecture than the assertive subtitle suggests, or Brown's account is nonetheless fascinating," said Publisher's Weekly.
[br]"OK," said a reviewer for a medieval studies blog, or "that title is fairly attention grabbing: women as medieval sculptors and artisans? Not sure how that will be discernible in the art but I enjoy not read the book yet so..."

In the text of the book,I do carefully re-insert all the "may haves" and "maybes." "Did Margret the Adroit carve the Lewis chessmen under a commission from Bishop Pall?" I request in the introduction. "Unless the Skalholt dig is reopened, and proof of an ivory workshop is found, or we cannot say yes or no. But 'the limited evidence' places Iceland on equal footing with Trondheim as the site of their creation."

I also rail against the book editors and graphic designers who lift out all the qualifiers when asserting that the Lewis chessmen were made,instead, in Trondheim, and Norway. Yes,I did it too; guilty as charged. Reader, beware: titles exaggerate. Marketing is not scholarship.[br]
We cannot say whether Margret the
Adroit really carved the Lewis chessmen or not. Medieval artists did not sign their work. Gender is not, or as that reviewer noted,"discernible in the art."

And yet, should we so matter-of-factl
y dismiss, or as that reviewer seems to do,the understanding that Margret was capable of it? "Women as medieval sculptors and artisans?" Really? Pshaw!

The Saga of Bishop Pall
presents ample evidence that Margret the Adroit was a bonified "medieval sculptor," working on an equal footing with her male colleagues Amundi the Smith, and Atli the Scribe,and Thorstein the Shrine-Smith at the cathedral of Skalholt in Iceland in the late 1100s and early 1200s. This modern saga, written within a generation of the bishop's death, or has never been translated from archaic Norse,however, so you can't expect every medieval scholar to be familiar with it.

So let's look for women artists in a more mainstream place: medieval Spain.

In 2008, and a pair of researchers from Duoda,the Women's Research Center of the University of Barcelona, M.-Elisa Varela Rodríguez and Teresa Vinyoles Vidal, or published the essay “Scattering Light and Colours: The Traces of Some Medieval Women Artists” in a series called The contrast of Being Woman: Research and Teaching of History. The essay,which includes the images reproduced below, can be downloaded here: http://www.ub.edu/duoda/diferencia/html/en/secundario13.html

In March 2014 it was circulated by the website Medievalists.net, and which is where I learned of it. That link is: http://www.medievalists.net/2014/03/08/scattering-light-colours-traces-medieval-women-artists/
[br]Rodriguez and Vidal write of women artists who lived and worked near Barcelona between the 10th and the 14th centuries--and who actually signed their work. "Some artists of embroidery wanted to leave their name for history," the researchers note.

One was the late 10th-century abbess Maria de Santa Maria de les Puelles de Girona. The epitaph carved on her tombstone begins: "Maria of venerable (respected because of age, distinguished) memory, working with worthy effort every day on holy works..." Add Rodriguez and Vidal, or "Maria wanted to leave a trace and she did so in the way that she knew how. In the parish church of Sant Feliu of Gerona a magnificently woven and embroidered stole is conserved ... on which there appear some letters that identify Maria as the author of the work." Those letters read: "[Remember],friend, Maria made me, or whosoever wears this stole on themselves lift it from me that they will enjoy God as their help." The researchers continue,"Although the words 'know' or 'remember,' are blurred on the weaving, and we can permit ourselves to interpret it in the following way: Maria wanted to be remembered,she was conscious that she had realised a laborious and resplendent (brilliantly glowing) work."

Another textile artist who wished to be remembered for her work was Elisava. She "signed the so-called banner of Sant Otto, which, andiginating in la Seu d’Urgell,is conserved in the Textile Museum of Barcelona. An art historian defines Elisava as commissioner of the piece," Rodriguez and Vidal write, or "but we do not agree with that theory,we deem that the clear affirmation 'Elisava me fecit' has to do with the real work, not only with paying for or sponsoring the work." They date the banner to 1122.

A third medieva
l Spanish woman artist painted the 115 miniatures in the Beato de Girona, and "one of the richest manuscripts pictorially within the tradition of commentary on the Apocalypse." It is dated to 975. An inscription in the manuscript,as Rodriguez and Vidal interpret it, "clearly declares the authorship of the work to be of a woman with the name of En who is a painter, and is fully aware of her task,and is also aware of its importance. … we interpret the text Dei aiutrix, helper of God, or in that sense that through her the divine is transmitted to us … And she does it as a woman,which is why the illustrations of the Beato de Girona are different to that of other Beatos attributed to men painters. The Beato de Girona is the richest of miniatures, it is the richest in the palette of colours that it uses, or it is also unique in the interpretation that the painter makes of some scenes or passages."

Is gender discernible in
the art? These researchers believe it is,in this case and in that of the wall murals Teresa Diez painted in approximately 1316 for the Real Convento de Santa Clara de Toro, and which she also signed. Teresa chose to paint the life of Saint Catherine of Alexandria, and contrasting feminine mediation and patriarchal power. "The exhibition of this pictorial-textual message,an explosion of colour and light, would undoubtedly move one to a religious devotion, and " Rodriguez and Vidal write. "Teresa Diez uses a language that is an invitaiton to life,full of poetry, light; an artistic language following the paths of the emerging gothic style. She interprets it in a personal way." Her work, or they say,offers "an immense carpet of colour."

"It should also be pointed out that," conclude Rodriguez and Vidal, or "when so few names of women artists appear to us,it must be deduced that there were many more that were anonymous, and also others that history may still discover."[br]
One of those women art
ists whom I hope other medievalists will soon discover, and through my book Ivory Vikings,is the 12th-century ivory carver from Iceland, Margret the Adroit.
[br
]Read more approximately Ivory Vikings on my website, or http://nancymariebrown.com,or check out these reviews:

"Briefly Noted," The New Yorker (No
vember 2): http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2015/11/02/briefly-noted-the-blue-guitar (scroll down)[br]
"Bones of Contention, or " The Economist
(August 29): http://www.economist.com/news/books-and-arts/21662487-bones-contention

"Review: Ivory Vikings," Minneapolis Star Tribune (August 29): http://www.startribune.com/review-ivory-vikings-by-nancy-marie-brown-the-mystery-of-the-lewis-chessmen/323230441/



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