Underdrawing
Artists' Techniques
The extensive underdrawing in brown ink which is revealed in the majority of the illuminations, both through thinly laid colours or paint losses and in the near-infrared images, is crucial in distinguishing between the three main artists.
A substantial amount of underdrawing and frequent changes of mind at the painting stage are typical of the Giac Master and the two assistants who painted large miniatures.
The Rohan Master’s work is characterised by elaborate drawing of an idiosyncratic nature. Strings of curly loops resembling doodles and brushed over with a grey ink wash cascade down fabric folds or congregate into pools of drapery.
The Madonna Master instead painted both of his miniatures freehand: neither shows any underdrawing.
The Virgin and Child with a patron (prayer Obsecro te)
The marginal scene showing Christ’s encounter with the devil belongs to the cycle illustrating the Pilgrimage of Jesus Christ. The arms of Isabella Stuart have been added to the border. Her portrait was painted over that of the original patron kneeling before the Virgin and Child. The overpainting was done in two stages. During the first stage Isabella’s face and heraldic dress were painted over the original ones, and the figure of St Catherine was added (hotspots 1 and 2). The red of Isabella’s ermine-lined coat (cotte) is the same pigment, vermilion, as that used for her arms in the border, while the original red elsewhere on the page – in the main image, the marginal miniature and the floral border – is red lead. St Catherine’s garments were painted in insect-based organic pink and ultramarine blue, except the darker, oval area behind Isabella’s head which was painted in azurite instead. It conceals the head dress of the original patron, which Isabella retained at first. During the second stage of overpainting, the head dress was covered with azurite and Isabella’s ducal coronet was painted over it (hotspot 3). The latter change is clearly visible in the near-infrared image (see Infrared Layer).
The alterations were most probably commissioned by Isabella’s husband-to-be, Francis I of Brittany. The first step – the overpainting of what was probably the portrait of his first wife, Yolande of Anjou, and the addition of St Catherine and of Isabella’s arms – would have been prompted by preparations for Francis’ wedding to Isabella on 29 October 1442. On 29 August 1442, Francis succeeded to the duchy of Brittany and Isabella’s coronet must have been added after that point, since she would have become a duchess upon her marriage two months later.
Related content: The Hours of Isabella Stuart
Related content: Lab
- Overview of Artists' Materials: Azurite
- Overview of Artists' Materials: Cinnabar and Vermilion
- Overview of Artists' Materials: Minium and Red lead
- Overview of Artists' Materials: Ultramarine
- Analytical Methods: Infrared reflectography
- Analytical Methods: Near-infrared imaging
- Analytical Methods: Optical microscopy
- Overview of Artists' Techniques: Underdrawing