Exhibition Closing: The Medieval Top Seller: The Book of Hours, The Cleveland Museum of Art, Closes 30 July 2023

Exhibition Closing

The Medieval Top Seller: The Book of Hours

Fri, 26 august 2022 to Sun, 30 July 2023

Gallery 115, The Cleveland Museum of Art

Leaf Leaf from a Book of Hours: Calendar Page for May (recto) and Calendar Page for June (verso) a Book of Hours: Calendar Page for May (recto) and Calendar Page for June (verso), c. 1510. France, Rouen. Ink, tempera, and liquid gold on vellum; leaf: 18.1 x 12.9 cm. The Cleveland Museum of Art, The Jeanne Miles Blackburn Collection, 2011.65.a–b

Books of hours were immensely popular devotional books in the later Middle Ages. Meant for laypeople or those not in the clergy, books of hours were at-home companions containing daily prayers as well as prayers for specific occasions, such as death, plague, warfare, travel, or bad weather. Ranging from lavishly decorated by hand with gold leaf to printed on paper with no images, books of hours were customizable and could be highly personalized to an individual’s tastes, budget, and interests. Mostly used by women, these books are estimated to have been owned by every fourth household at the height of their popularity. Such popularity lasted until around the 1550s, when German priest Martin Luther, in his attempts to reform the Catholic Church which led to the Protestant Reformation, declared them full of “un-Christian tomfoolery,” and they fell out of favor. These precious volumes are windows into the medieval world and the lives of their original owners. 

For more information, https://www.clevelandart.org/exhibitions/medieval-top-seller-book-hours