Catalonia, c. 1340
The pages from 185 on are "characterised by [a] great iconographic freedom", consisting of 46 relatively large miniatures with vividly coloured borders which are divided into compartments. They are the work of painter
Ferrer Bassa. The unfinished manuscript was transferred to Catalonia shortly after being made.
Peter IV of Aragon (Pedro the Ceremonious) was crowned king of
Aragón in 1336. Bassa had already returned from his journey acquiring knowledge in
Tuscany where he had been in contact with the most fertile and creative painting in the Italian
Trecento. Bassa produced several works commissioned by the king in his
Barcelona workshop. A splendid psalter of English origin came into his hands, but, for some unknown reason, it was unfinished. The English masters had, however, left sketches for seven miniatures and allocated blank spaces for the rest. It is highly likely that Pedro the Ceremonious insisted on Ferrer Bassa completing this spectacular psalter for him whilst respecting its sumptuous lavishness. Modern-day researchers have found many clues linking its completion to the king himself. The seven paintings drawn by the Canterbury masters and painted by Ferrer Bassa a century later are the result of a truly unique combination of the Anglo-Byzantine culture close to the 1200 and the pictorial forms of the 1300 Italianate Gothic. They constitute a remarkable fusion of cultures, a hybrid art in which no boundaries of space, time or culture exist. In the second part of the manuscript, Ferrer Bassa's brushstrokes reinterpret the
Byzantine dimension of English painting with greater artistic licence, revealing a thorough knowledge of trecentist pictorial resources. Bassa's images convey new ways of structuring space along with more naturalist landscapes. Ferrer Bassa, considered to be the finest painter in Aragon in the 14th century, developed a personality of his own, clearly marked by the Tuscan styles of the Trecento, particularly those of
Florence and
Siena with which he was so familiar. A painter making a delicate, elegant and refined use of colour. Bassa was the painter of the Catalan-Aragonese royal household and the preferred artist of
Alfonso the Kind and Pedro the Ceremonious, who both commissioned him to produce several works for their residences and chapels royal. Most of them were apparently portraits, now missing. == The
Great Canterbury Psalter ==