Anne of Brittany
Owners
Heraldic arms combining the ermines of Brittany with the fleurs-de-lis of France, and portraits at the Primer’s beginning and end, connect the Primer with Anne of Brittany, queen to two successive French kings, Charles VIII (1483-1498) and Louis XII (1498-1515).
Anne was pregnant numerous times and gave birth to at least fourteen children, but only two survived to adulthood: Claude (1499-1524), and her sister, Renée (1510-1574). A full-page miniature showing the queen praying to St Claude serves as a frontispiece to the work (fol. 2v/p. 1).
Anne of Brittany praying to St Claude
Anne of Brittany, kneeling at a prayer desk beside a youthful Virgin Mary, is presented by St Anne to the enthroned bishop, St Claude. A book bound in red rests on the prayer desk, which is covered in a blue cloth embroidered with fleurs-de-lis and gold initials A for Anne. The carpet bears Anne’s arms (France impaling Brittany), which are also held aloft by the angel on a pillar in the left margin. The arms are depicted a third time in the lower margin encircled by the motto, PENSON EN DIEU, with sprays of blue flowers on either side. Shown in prayer, Anne serves as a pious model for her daughter, Claude, for whom she commissioned the book.
The loose, rapid brush work of the artist is clearly visible in the dark blue-green background and the light grey floor. Preparatory sketches for the drapery folds appear through the thin layers of the gold mantle of St Claude, shaded and outlined in organic pink, and of Anne of Brittany’s gold dress, which has contrasting outlines in dark indigo. The infrared image reveals the full extent of the thick lines of the underdrawing in the draperies and in the faces, particularly of St Anne.