Master of Death: Lifeless Art of Pierre Remiet, Illuminator

Michael Camille

List price £40.00

Product Details
Format:
Hardback
ISBN:
9780300064575
Published:
31 Dec 1996
Publisher:
Yale University Press
Dimensions:
286 pages - 256 x 192mm
Number of Illustrations:
192 illus
Availability:
Not available, publisher indicates OP

Michael Camille's "history of death in miniature" explores not just the life and death of a single medieval artist, nor a society's obsession with the macabre, but the relation between mortality and image-making itself. Camille argues that the medieval world perceived death as larger than life, that death was implicit at birth and stretched beyond the end of life to the resurrection of the body at the Last Judgement. Each of Camille's chapters, framed by an imagined account of Remiet's last hours in 14th-century Paris and illustrated wih examples of his paintings, follows this path of death. Camille describes the theological origins of death and its physical beginnings at birth. He shows how representations of death shaped medieval motions of the historical past. He tells us that in the medieval period, people were constantly preparing themselves for death, as shown by Remiet's image of the figure of Death waiting at the end of the pilgrimage of human life. And he explains that Remiet's frequent depiction of the rotting corpse reveals his society's dreaded anticipation of the end of time when, reawakened in the flesh, each individual would face the threat of an eternal and terrifying second death.
Exploring the "history of death in miniature", this work examines the life and death of the medieval artist, Pierre Remiet, the obsession of medieval society with death and the macabre, and the relation between mortality and image-making itself.
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