The Madonna Master
Artists
The Madonna Master is named after the two images he contributed to this manuscript: the Apocalyptic Virgin (fol. 136v) and the Madonna in the Church (fol. 141v).
The only full-page miniatures in the volume, they are also the two illuminations that incorporate motifs from the Limbourg brother’s works and replicate their painting technique most successfully. The Madonna Master’s images are characterised by elegant restraint, calm introspection and sweet tenderness, all hallmarks of the International Gothic style. He painted freehand, without any underdrawing. This confidence, the fully blended pigments and the supple modelling of fabrics and faces suggest the hand of an experienced painter.
Madonna and Child in a Church (Five Joys of the Virgin)
The second full-page miniature painted by the Madonna Master, this image incorporates in its interior a design of the Limbourg brothers which was in the collection of Yolande of Aragon’s son, René of Anjou, by the 1430s. The demure Madonna exudes dignified sophistication and gentle self-control, even though she seems to be propelled towards the viewer from the depth of the picture space. Rendered in soft grey charcoal over the bare parchment (hotspots 1 and 2), the Madonna appears to be either carved out of the page, a statue that has just come to life and miraculously stepped out of its niche, or conjured up by the imagination, a sublime vision in the mind’s eye of a devout viewer. Creating tension between the materiality and spirituality of the image, the Madonna Master’s consummate technical skill is made ever more impressive by the economy of his materials.
In addition to the ultramarine blue, vermilion red, malachite green, organic pink, lead white and gold he used to paint the Apocalyptic Virgin, here the Madonna Master also employed silver to paint small details in the background, as well as an organic colourant for the muted green architectural interior. The skilful and subtle modelling of flesh tones and draperies, the sophistication of the Madonna, as well as the seamless integration of architecture and storytelling, all single him out as the most talented artist in the Hours of Isabella Stuart.