Condition Report
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Lot 52
Sale 6388 - Western Manuscripts and Miniatures
Jul 8, 2025
10:00AM CT
Live / Chicago
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Estimate
$500 -
700
Price Realized
$960
Sold prices are inclusive of Buyer’s Premium
Lot Description
BRUGES WORKSHOP
Three leaves from a Book of Hours, Use of Rome, ca. 1460, in Latin, illuminated manuscript on parchment [Southern Netherlands, Bruges, c. 1460]
Three leaves from a Book of Hours, Use of Rome, ca. 1460, in Latin, illuminated manuscript on parchment [Southern Netherlands, Bruges, c. 1460]
Richly illuminated Book of Hours leaves gold-accented foliate borders and large pink and blue initials with white penwork.
c. 174 × 112 mm. Three leaves, ruled in red ink for sixteen lines (justification: 96 × 66), foliated in upper right margin “18,” “80,” and “112” in modern pencil by two different hands, written in dark brown ink in a small gothic liturgical script, versal initials in blue and burnished gold with penwork in red and black, two-line initials in burnished gold with on blue and red ground with white filigree infill, illuminated borders sprouting from illuminated bars, containing colored and burnished gold flowers, fruits, and ivy leaves on black hairline sprays. Light wear to margins of leave, pigments and gold remain vibrant.
These three Book of Hours leaves, created circa 1460, display a characteristically Bruges illumination style. Each leaf features large painted initials in gold on pink and blue ground with delicate white penwork tracery, and the margins are filled with full foliate borders of curling ivy-vine tendrils, colorful flowers, and acanthus leaves accented in gold. This decorative vocabulary – the gilded rinceaux initials and densely illuminated floral borders – closely parallels mid-15th-century Bruges workmanship, as seen in works by Willem Vrelant such as the Llangattock Hours (Los Angeles, Getty Museum, Ms. Ludwig IX 7), illuminated in Bruges c. 1450. The texts on the leaves contain content from the Penitential Psalms (Psalm 85) and Hours of the Virgin (Matins and Vespers).
Provenance
(1) Sotheby’s, London, 6 July 2004, lot 22.
(2) Private Collection, California, USA.
Sister leaves
Sister leaves from this same manuscript have appeared in various sales, including Sotheby’s 6 July 2004, lot 279, and 6 December 2005, lot 366; these show identical dimensions, decoration, and script, and likely come from the same Book of Hours produced in Bruges for Roman use.
LITERATURE
Unpublished; for Willem Vrelant and his circle see: Antoine De Schryver, “Willem Vrelant et son atelier à Bruges,” Revue belge d'archéologie et d'histoire de l'art 51 (1982): 3–46; Richard Sterling, “Willem Vrelant: A Fifteenth-Century Miniaturist in Bruges,” PhD diss., University of California, 1987; Thomas Kren and Scot McKendrick, eds., Illuminating the Renaissance: The Triumph of Flemish Manuscript Painting in Europe, Los Angeles, 2003; Annemie Willemsen, Miniatures flamandes: 1404–1482, Brussels, 2011.
We thank Senior Consultant Sandra Hindman and Peter Bovenmyer for their assistance in preparing this sale.
This lot is located in Chicago.

