The Macclesfield Master
Artists
The Macclesfield Master designed the overall decorative programme and supplied most of the pictorial contents. Figures displaying a range of emotions and convincing depictions of the human body are characteristic of his style. He painted the full-page miniatures of St Edmund of Bury and St Andrew; an image of Christ as Judge; all but one of the historiated initials; most of the busts and profiles inside other Psalm initials; most of the borders (including figural decoration) and almost all of the bas-de-page scenes.
Prefatory image
St Edmund of Bury (841-869), the king and patron saint of East Anglia, was martyred by the Vikings. His pose is elegantly restrained, his gestures solemn and his expression calm, as he clutches an arrow, the symbol of his martyrdom.
St Edmund’s draperies are modelled with gradations of organic pink, verdigris and azurite (hotspot 1) with lead white, to create a three dimensional effect. The different hues of pink found on the page were obtained by adding different white pigments to a red dye. The light pink in St Edmund’s tunic contains lead white (hotspot 2) and the dark pink in the border instead contains gypsum (hotspot 3).