BURTSCHELL, FR. ~ Die Zehn Gebote Gottes [The Ten Commandments, in German]. [Bingen am Rhein, 24 July 1887].
Illuminated broadside (590 × 440 mm), ink and gouache with silver and gold, the latter with pinprick decoration. Very minor flaking to a few letters of text. Pencil inscription to verso: ‘Meinem lieben bruder Joseph zum andenken an mein erstes heliges messopfer zu Bingen am Rhein der 24 Juli 1887 Fr. Burtschell’.
A superb illuminated Ten Commandments, with the German text in calligraphic gothic script, beneath a title ‘Die Zehn Gebote Gottes’ arranged on a rainbow forming a partially arched top to the sheet. The background contains a rich array of iconography in the style of a medieval manuscript, including Adam and Eve in paradise at the head on a decorated gold background, God in the heavens (with sun, moon and star), personifications of each of the sins, all arranged around a central tree of life linking heaven and earth. The central scene, on a silver mandala is a betrothal or wedding scene. Perhaps most striking of all is the rich azure ground, stippled with silver and overlaid with scrolling branches and leaves, inhabited by birds and animals. It is a splendid example of late nineteenth-century medievalism, and the revival of the art of manuscript illumination, experienced in Germany as much as in other European countries, especially in the context of the revival of Roman Catholicism. The revival in Germany has been studied in detail by Michela Braesel (see ‘Medieval Elements in Nineteenth-Century German Illumination. Context and Models’ in The Revival of Medieval Illumination, ed. Thomas Coomans & Jan de Maeyer, Leuven, 2007). Little more has been discovered of the artist and the recipient, except that they were both members of a large Bingen family, of who several members appear to have emigrated to the United States.
