Psalter of Bonne de Luxembourg

The Psalter of Bonne de Luxembourg is a small 14th-century illuminated manuscript in tempera, grisaille, ink and gold leaf on vellum.[1] It is held in the collection of The Cloisters, New York, where it is usually on display.

The Fool Hath said in his heart, There is no God; illustration of Psalm 53. Miniature from Psalter of Bonne de Luxembourg, Jean le Noir, c. 1348–49, New York, The Cloisters, Inv. 69. 86. (12.5 x 8.4 x 3.9 cm)

The book was probably commissioned for Bonne de Luxembourg, Duchess of Normandy, daughter of John the Blind and the wife of John II of France, probably at the end of her husband's life, c 1348–49. At the time illuminated manuscripts could compete with monastic scriptoria and panel painting as commercially attractive donor portraits. Bonne died of plague in 1349.

It consists of 333 pages of parchment each measuring 126 x 88 mm. The illustrations are attributed to the miniaturist Jean Le Noir, and include graphic representations of astrological predictions by the Roman writer Marcus Manilius.

Commission

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Bonne of Luxembourg with her husband Jean

The book was commissioned for Jutta of Luxembourg, the second daughter of John the Blind, king of Bohemia, and his first wife, Elisabeth of Bohemia, the intended first wife of King John II of France. Bonne died young, before she assumed position as Queen of France. However she was mother to Charles V and his brother Jean, duc de Berry. Her arms, showing Luxembourg impaled with Valois, decorate the lower border of the pages. The ornate linings contain a variety of flora and bird species. Jean Le Noir is credited with executing the best-known pages; a crucifixion scene, a double page Memento mori, The Three Living and the Three Dead, and a representation of a highly placed courtier held back by a fool. The work as a whole is noted for its preoccupation with death and its implications thereof.

The artist most associated with the manuscript is Jean Le Noir, active in Paris between 1335 and 1375.[2] Other hands include members of his workshop and possibly his daughter, Bourgot.[3] The style seems influenced by Jean Pucelle.[4]

Description

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The Fool Hath said in his heart, There is no God, folio 83v

The illustrations are characterised by unusually skilled handling of line, silhouette, and the realistic modeling of the figures. It begins ordinarily enough with a calendar showing traditional scenes of farm labourers and zodiac signs. The main body of the book consists of illustrations of the Psalms. The final pages include unusual miniatures illustrating prayers, including folio 315, a representation of Divine Love Enthroned. The choice of iconographical elements and themes are unusually dark, specific, and thought to have originated by request from Jutta, who died thereafter.[3]

 
Crucifixion

A crucifixion scene shows two kneeling figures before the crucified Christ. He lays his hands directly on His wounds, described in the accompanying text. In this way he is depicted as a self-sacrificing God, and is painted in a very naturalistic, human manner.[3] It is on this basis dated to just before her death in 1349, a period when the Black Death was beginning to ravage Europe. The passages in the manuscript depict the suffering caused by this new plague, and have been described as of "incredible intensity".[3] The most acclaimed two leaves illustrate the Two Fools and the Three Living and the Three Dead, an allegory of transience and reminder to the viewer of their mortality. This double miniature is one of the first such allegories to appear in northern European art, and seems influenced by the French poets Baudouin de Condé and Nicolas de Margival. The first page depicts three young courtiers who happen across a cemetery, to find three corpses at varying degrees of decomposition. The dead mock the young men's superficial outlook, and in what was to become a classic motif of Memento mori, the accompanying text urges reflection by asking "What you are, we once were; what we are, you will be."[5]

The page margins contain at least two hundred birds of around forty species, mostly depicted three-eights of an inch or less in size. Most were well and minutely described from life and identifiable; the leaves feature miniature depictions sparrows, finches, larks, among others; some depictions are either fanciful or to badly drawn or indistinct to believe as from life.[6] The treatment of the birds is so consistent it has been suggested that they were designed by a single hand, although with the weaker examples, he had perhaps been accompanied by a less familiar assistant.[7]

The page illustrating Psalm 53, The Fool Hath said in his heart, There is no God, shows a man drinking from a chalice, a typical attribute of the fool, signifying drunkenness. He is held back by another man who holds his long hood and beats him. This second character probably comes from the tradition of depicting the fool as a yokel or madman clutching a cudgel.[8] The first fool has variously been identified as a drunkard, a monk, and Archbishop Baldwin of Luxembourg. A contemporary viewer would have likely recognised him as a Jew.[9][10] Both men contain elements of the grotesque, and are executed in grisaille against a deep blue background. The bas-de-page contains two lions gnawing at the Bonne of Luxembourg coat-of-arms.[5]

References

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Notes

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  1. ^ "Psalter and Hours of Bonne of Luxembourg, Duchess of Normandy". Metropolitan Museum, New York. Retrieved 5 April 2015.
  2. ^ "The Prayer Book of Bonne of Luxembourg, Duchess of Normandy before 1349". www.metmuseum.org. Retrieved 2018-06-14.
  3. ^ a b c d Walther, 218
  4. ^ "Psalter and Hours of Bonne de Luxembourg, Duchess of Normandy, before 1349". Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History. Retrieved 5 April 2015.
  5. ^ a b Walther, 219
  6. ^ Vauri, 279
  7. ^ Vauri, 280
  8. ^ Gifford, D. J. "Iconographical Notes towards a Definition of the Medieval Fool," Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 37 (1974): pp. 336–42
  9. ^ Lipton, Sara (2014). Dark Mirror: The Medieval Origins of Anti-Jewish Iconography. Henry Holt and Company. p. 172. ISBN 978-0-8050-9601-9.
  10. ^ The fool as a monk is found in the Jérome Pichon sales catalog of 1897. W.G. Land's "The Prayer Book of Bonne of Luxembourg: A Personal Document" (1980) proposed Archbishop Baldwin. He is identified as a Jew in Mellinkoff (Outcasts, vol. 1). Avril (Manuscript Painting at the Court of France: The Fourteenth Century (1978)) and Sterling (La Peinture médiévale à Paris, 1300–1500, vol. 2 (1990)) also see him as a Jew, or an "expression of anti-Judaism".

Bibliography

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  • Deuchler, Florens. "Looking at Bonne of Luxembourg's Prayer Book". The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin, New Series, Vol. 29, No. 6 (Feb., 1971), pp. 267–278.
  • Lermack, Annette. "The Pivotal Role of the Two Fools Miniature in the Psalter of Bonne of Luxembourg". Gesta, Vol. 47, No. 2 (2008), pp. 79–98.
  • Little, Charles; Husband, Timothy. "Europe in the Middle Ages". New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1987. ISBN 978-0-8709-9447-0
  • Vaurie, Charles. "Birds in the Prayer Book of Bonne of Luxembourg". The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin, volume 29, no. 6, February, 1971
  • Walther, Ingo. Codices illustres: The world's most famous illuminated manuscripts. Taschen, 2014. ISBN 978-3-8365-5379-7
  • Wixom, William. "Medieval Sculpture at The Cloisters". The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin, volume 46, no. 3, Winter, 1988–1989
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