Title: The Presentation in the Temple
Artist: Jean Bourdichon
Medium: Tempera and gold on parchment
Size: 24 x 17 cm
Date: 1499
Location: The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles
Luke 2:22-32: After the days required by Moses’ Teachings to
make a mother clean had passed, Joseph and Mary went to Jerusalem. They took
Jesus to present him to the Lord. They did exactly what was written in the
Lord’s Teachings: “Every firstborn boy is to be set apart as holy to the Lord.”
They also offered a sacrifice as required by the Lord’s Teachings: “a pair of
mourning doves or two young pigeons.” A man named Simeon was in Jerusalem. He
lived an honorable and devout life. He was waiting for the one who would comfort
Israel. The Holy Spirit was with Simeon and had told him that he wouldn’t die
until he had seen the Messiah, whom the Lord would send. Moved by the Spirit,
Simeon went into the temple courtyard. Mary and Joseph were bringing the child
Jesus into the courtyard at the same time. They brought him so that they could
do for him what Moses’ Teachings required. Then Simeon took the child in his
arms and praised God by saying, “Now, Lord, you are allowing your servant to
leave in peace as you promised. My eyes
have seen your salvation, which you have prepared for all people to see. He is
a light that will reveal salvation to the nations and bring glory to your
people Israel.”
This leaf depicting the Presentation in the Temple originally
comes from a manuscript known as the Hours of Louis XII, so-called after its patron King Louis XII of France, and was
one of the greatest French manuscripts of its time. Here Mary is
seen in half-length, situated at the front of the space, close to the viewer
who seems to peer over her shoulder at the scene of the presentation of her
infant son at the altar of the priest Simeon. The
purpose of compositions such as this one - which were increasingly popular in
the second half of the 15th century - was to bring viewers physically
closer to the narrative and actively engage them in the event being portrayed.
Jean Bourdichon (c.1457 – 1521) was a French miniature
painter and manuscript illuminator at the court of France with a career that
lasted nearly forty years during the reigns of Louis XI, Charles VIII, Louis
XII and Francis I of France. As court painter, he designed stained glass
windows, coins, gold plate, illuminated manuscripts, and executed independent
paintings. Charles VIII set up a workshop for him in his castle at
Plessis-lès-Tours and gave large dowries to Bourdichon's daughters, and
Bourdichon himself became a wealthy landowner. Today, only one of his panel
paintings is known to survive and he is therefore known primarily from his work
in manuscripts. He is last recorded in 1520, receiving payment for the
decoration of tents for the opulent encounter of Henry VIII and Francis I at
the Field of the Cloth of Gold.
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