Picturing Men at Prayer Gender in Manuscript Owner Portraits around 1300

The visibility of women in owner portraits from the early era of books of hours (ca. 1230–1350) reflected and shaped perceptions of literate prayer as a feminine activity. While owner portraits of men are comparatively rare, they are not unknown. Images of laymen and laywomen devotees in four illumi...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Getty research journal Vol. 13; no. 13; pp. 31 - 62
Main Author: Doyle, Maeve K.
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Chicago J. Paul Getty Trust 01-01-2021
Getty Publications
The University of Chicago Press
University of Chicago Press
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Summary:The visibility of women in owner portraits from the early era of books of hours (ca. 1230–1350) reflected and shaped perceptions of literate prayer as a feminine activity. While owner portraits of men are comparatively rare, they are not unknown. Images of laymen and laywomen devotees in four illuminated manuscripts from northern France around 1300, and in particular the owner portraits of men in the Ruskin Hours held by the J. Paul Getty Museum, evince the ways gendered use is conceived and constructed in these intimate luxury objects. Images of men at prayer distinguish masculine devotion from feminized practices of literate prayer. Chivalric imagery emphasizes class as well as gender, and the conspicuous absence of the attribute of the book frames lay masculine devotion as an active, externalized practice.
ISSN:1944-8740
2329-1249
DOI:10.1086/713429