
Getty Museum
The Visitation
Creator
Jean BourdichonFrench Illuminator · 1457–1521
All works by this person →Over the course of a career that lasted nearly forty years, Jean Bourdichon served as official court painter to four successive French kings: Louis XI, Charles VIII, Louis XII, and François I. As court painter, he designed stained glass windows, coins, and gold plate, illuminated manuscripts, and executed independent paintings. Charles VIII set up a workshop for him in his castle at Plessis-lès-To
More on Getty ULAN- Date
- about 1480–1485
- Medium
- Tempera colors, gold, and ink
- Culture
- French
- Department
- Manuscripts
- Institution
- Getty Museum
In many books of hours, like this one, a miniature depicting a scene from the life of the Virgin precedes each of the eight devotions of the Hours of the Virgin. Here the Visitation precedes Lauds, which opens: *Deus in adiutorium meu[m] intende. Domine ad adiuvandum me festina* (God, come to my assistance. Lord, make haste to help me). According to the Gospel of Saint Luke, the angel Gabriel informed Mary at the Annunciation that her elderly cousin Elizabeth would bear a child. When Mary hastened to her cousin's house and greeted her, Elizabeth felt her child, John the Baptist, leap in her womb. In the miniature, Elizabeth kneels in homage before Mary, as she was the first to recognize Mary as the mother of God. In his depiction of the two women, Jean Bourdichon contrasted the Virgin's youthful beauty with the weathered visage of Elizabeth, who was well past childbearing years when she became pregnant. He also used atmospheric perspective to suggest how the eye reads objects in the distance differently: within the background landscape, objects further away are less distinct while closer objects are carefully delineated.
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