User:Moiselle4dreaa

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Ten Citations on Philippe Pigouchet[edit]

Source1. Book Meg's History of Graphic Design By: Philip B Meggs

  • This one being the most obvious one is a web page that includes a photo of Pigochet's Book of Hours- Its in our textbooks.
  • Actual prints of the Book of Hours.
  • The book has a short description of Pigouchet as being a publisher
  • Talked about Pigouchet working with Simon Vostre.
  • I can also include the medieval manuscript cultural/religious shifts while the Book of hours was printed.

https://www.inkling.com/read/history-of-graphic-design-philip-meggs-5th/chapter-6/figure-6-33

https://www.inkling.com/read/history-of-graphic-design-philip-meggs-5th/chapter-6/figure-6-34

Source2. Book "Scribes, Script, and Books: The Book Arts from Antiquity to the Renaissance" By: Leila Avrin

  • This book talks about the manuscript behind the making/duplicate of Pigouchet's book of hours.
  • Includes a photo of a print circa 1488 (incunabula period)
  • Talks about publishing in vellum paper with color.


http://books.google.com/books?id=4q1MHDoFVwkC&pg=PA337&lpg=PA337&dq=%22philippe+pigouchet%22+or+%22design%22&source=bl&ots=vCzUSnwj0d&sig=Xi-oQtNaxUpCwyfGIb1T7ZwkHaY&hl=en&sa=X&ei=cBxeUvSrLenh4AOuvYDgBw&ved=0CEkQ6AEwBw#v=onepage&q=%22philippe%20pigouchet%22%20or%20%22design%22&f=false

Source3. Website [[1]]

  • This one, I am a bit skeptical about because it is a blog but the it is written from Princeton University. The blog also mentions Sandra Hindman- she wrote a book on illuminated scriptures.

"...According to Sandra Hindman, Parisian printers turned out more than 1,775 editions of Books of Hours from about 1475 to 1600."

Princeton University Library owns six bound copies published by Pigouchet and Vostre, with as many as 16 large metalcuts along with other illustrations. The Graphic Arts Collection holds a set of leaves, ten metalcuts, which have been removed from a 1496 edition. Here are a few examples.

Source 4. Book "An Unrecorded Book Of Hours"

  • I put this under a actual MLA cite because i believe the page is locked. I want to use this article in my wiki page because it talks about Pigochet's work as being "unprinted" or unraveled. It sheds light to his work.

van der Horst, Koert. "An Unrecorded Book Of Hours, Printed By Plantin With A (Partly) Unrecorded Series Of Illustrations." Quaerendo 37.4 (2007): 291-304. Academic Search Complete. Web. 16 Oct. 2013.

Source 5. Book Online Exhibition of Book Illustration of the Fifteenth Century Laura H. Dudley Bulletin of the Fogg Art Museum Vol. 1, No. 2 (Jan., 1932), pp. 22-29


  • This book has a lot of information on wood blocks
  • More photos of Pigouchet's work


Source 6. Article "THE DESIGN ELEMENTS OF MEDIEVAL BOOKS OF HOURS." by: Mary Webb Source from he article- Journal of Technical Writing & Communication. 2001, Vol. 31 Issue 4, p353. 9p.

  • Other works on The Book of Hours
  • Talks about Pigouchet's technique
  • The importance of printing religious manuscripts
  • Seems like Pigouchet only published one book. (book of hours)

Source7. Book:Exhibition of Book Illustration of the Fifteenth Century Author(s): Laura H. Dudley


http://www.jstor.org/stable/pdfplus/4300892.pdf?&acceptTC=true&jpdConfirm=true

"....Dupre was the finest of the early printers in Paris. By I5oo he had printed about fifty illus- trated books, more than half of which were missals, breviaries, and Horae. He worked for the publisher V6rard who issued in 1486 the first printed Book of Hours. He was the first to make the printed Book of Hours a work of art. In Philippe Pigouchet, who printed for Simon Vostre, Dupre had a formidable rival. His Books of Hours are the most beautiful that have ever been printed."

  • This is probably the only source i found in which it talks about any interacting with another artist- being a rival because he printed the book of hours so beautifully. Not sure if this is good information on him.
  • The book speaks about other manuscripts on other artist.


Source8. Book Old Books and New


http://www.jstor.org/stable/pdfplus/25628571.pdf?&acceptTC=true&jpdConfirm=true The Art Amateur, Vol. 16, No. 6 (May, 1887), pp. 142-144 Im not sure who published this book.

  • It turns out that Pigouchet didn't just print the book of hours but also printed a boarder of "HEURES A L'USAIGE DE ROME,"

(Website typing the whole entire article.) http://archive.org/stream/catalogilluminat00grolrich/catalogilluminat00grolrich_djvu.txt

Source9. The book: its printers, illustrators, and binders, from Gutenberg to the present time by: Henri Bouchot, Anton Einsle


Education[edit]

Studying at the College of Staten Island. [2]

Majoring in Media Communications

Minoring in Art Studio


--Moiselle4dreaa (talk) 02:17, 18 September 2013 (UTC) A. Andrea Lopez