The Ascension: Leaf from a Book of Hours (4 of 6 Excised Leaves)

Cleveland Museum of Art

The Ascension: Leaf from a Book of Hours (4 of 6 Excised Leaves)

Henri d'Orquevaulx

Date
c. 1420–30
Medium
ink, tempera, silver, and gold on vellum
Culture
France, Metz, 15th century
Department
Medieval Art
Institution
Cleveland Museum of Art

This leaf survives from what must have been an extraordinarily rich book of hours. The elaborate Passion cycle and Suffrages point to an important patron. Internal evidence within the original calendar and texts indicates that Metz was the probable place of production. Stylistically, the illuminations appear to come from the workshop of Henri d’Orquevaulx, a documented Metz manuscript painter. Compositionally, structurally, and stylistically, the miniatures suggest strong links to Netherlandish illumination. It is not known whether d’Orquevaulx came originally from the Netherlands or whether he simply worked or trained there at some point in his career. Mostly used by women, books of hours are estimated to have been owned by every fourth household at the height of their popularity.

The authoritative record is held by Cleveland Museum of Art. LinkedCulture surfaces this object and its connections; it does not alter institutional metadata.

Related across collections

Semantically similar works from Cleveland Museum of Art and other institutions.