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Master of the Boccaccio Illustrations

( fl c. 1470–90). South Netherlandish engraver. The name was given by Passavant to the anonymous engraver of nine illustrations in a French translation of Boccaccio, De La Ruine des nobles hommes et femmes, published by Colard Mansion (Bruges, 1476). This is the earliest surviving printed book to be illustrated with pasted-in engravings; of the few extant copies, the most complete, which contains eight hand-coloured prints, is in Boston, MA (Mus. F.A.). It is now clear that the nine illustrations are by different hands: Passavant, no. 5/Lehrs, no. 4, P 6/L 5, P 8/L 7–8 and possibly P 10/L 10 can be attributed to the illuminator known as the MASTER OF THE DRESDEN PRAYERBOOK (see below); P 3/L 2, P 7/L 6 and P 9/L 9 can be attributed to the Master of the White Inscriptions. The latter probably also executed P 4/L 3, which is a copy after the fragmentary print in the Bibliothèque Nationale in Paris, formerly attributed to the Housebook Master.

Part of the Masters, anonymous, and monogrammists family

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  Reproduced by kind permission of Macmillan Publishers Limited, publishers of The Grove Dictionary of Art.
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