Beginning in 1970, master
calligrapher Donald Jackson—the official
scribe in the
Crown Office at the
House of Lords of the
United Kingdom—expressed in media interviews his lifelong desire to create a completely handwritten illuminated Bible. In 1995 Jackson attended a Saint John's University-sponsored
calligraphy presentation at the
Newberry Library in Chicago, following which he discussed the possibility of a handwritten Bible with Father
Eric Hollas,
OSB, the former executive director of the
Hill Museum & Manuscript Library at
Saint John's University in
Collegeville, Minnesota. Between 1996 and 1997, Saint John's University explored the feasibility of the Bible project, with Jackson creating first samples and theologians developing the initial illumination schema. ''The Saint John's Bible'' was officially commissioned in 1998 by the Benedictine Monks at Saint John's University, and external funding opportunities were launched. The project was introduced to the public in 1999 and production was completed in 2011—with the final word penned in May 2011 and touch-up work completed by December 2011—taking 23 artists and calligraphers over 11 years to complete. The headquarters for the project is located at Saint John's University, and Donald Jackson's
scriptorium is located in
Monmouth, Wales.
Mission Saint John's states that the purpose of ''The Saint John's Bible'' is the following: "At the onset of a new millennium, Saint John's University and the monks of Saint John's Abbey sought to ignite the spiritual imagination of people throughout the world by commissioning a work of art that illuminates the world today." Donald Jackson and his team also outlined during the production of the Bible six core values for its readers to apply to their lives: igniting spiritual imagination, glorifying God's word, reviving tradition, discovering history through manuscript exploration, fostering the arts, and giving a voice to the underprivileged.
Techniques The creators of ''The Saint John's Bible
used a mixture of modern technology (computers used to plan the layout of the Bible and line-breaks for the text) and older techniques used in the creation of ancient illuminated manuscripts (handwritten with turkey, goose, and swan quills on calf-skin vellum; gold and platinum leaf and hand-ground pigments; Chinese stick ink). The official website for The
Saint John's Bible
states the following regarding the techniques used in the creation of the book:The unique aspect of the Bible is that it is a Bible for our time. It is a combination of ancient methods and materials with themes, images and technology of the 21st century and beyond. The Saint John's Bible'' represents humankind's achievements over the past 500 years. It is a contemporary blending of religious imagery from various Eastern and Western traditions, as befits our modern understanding of the global village. This Bible reflects Saint John's commitment to Scripture and to the Book Arts, as well as to spiritual, artistic, educational and scholarly programming. Donald Jackson, the primary calligrapher, created a unique script specifically for the project.
Committee on Illumination and Text During production, a team of scholars and theologians gathered weekly to develop the theological content behind the illuminations. This included not only developing the schema for the illuminations (i.e., which passages would be illuminated, how the illuminations would be incorporated into the text), but also identifying underlying themes and elements for the artists to incorporate. The meetings of the Committee on Illuminations and Text took place in
Collegeville, Minnesota and much of the artwork was produced in
Wales, resulting in a transatlantic collaboration as drafts were passed between the two groups. Michael Patella, OSB—chair of the Committee on Illumination and Text—explained the underlying purpose of the committee's work: "The illuminations are not illustrations. They are spiritual meditations on a text. It is a very Benedictine approach to Scriptures." == ''The Saint John's Bible'' ==