The book contains 20 full-page miniatures and 16 small format illustrations. They are all of the highest quality and can be mostly attributed to individual artists or hands. There are noticeable changes in standards and style between the miniatures attributed to the Master of Mary of Burgundy and those attributed to other hands. There is some commonality between the images; the idealised facial types are similar, and thin
cumulus clouds appear throughout. The Master's work is characterised by mixed colours that whiten toward the horizon, while in others they are saturated. He achieved the modelling of figures and objects by building layers of paint in thin but visible brush strokes, rather than
hatching. His palette is noticeably darker than that of the other hands, mostly consisting of purples, browns and greys, with the areas around the figure's faces and hands coloured with black pigment. It is because of these two miniatures that the Master is seen as the main innovator in bringing about a new style of Flemish illumination in the 1470s and 1480s, earning him a great number of imitators. The colourisation is often extremely subtle, with some illustrations containing upwards of eighteen different shades.
Virgin and Child Mary of Burgundy can be identified as the woman in the foreground of folio 14v from the facial similarity to documented contemporary drawings and paintings. She is shown as an elegant young princess, reading a book of hours. Her finger traces the text of what seem to be the words
Obsecro te Domina sancta maria ("I Beseech Thee, Holy Mary"), a popular
prayer of indulgence in contemporary manuscript illuminations of
donors venerating the Virgin and Child. Mary is positioned in an intimate and private domestic setting, probably a private chapel or
oratory, reading a book of hours draped in a green cloth. A small white dog, a symbol of faithfulness, rests on her lap. She wears a gold or brown velvet dress, and a long
hennin, from which hangs a transparent veil. The window before her is opened through two timber boards adorned with glass. Its ledge contains a veil, rosary beads, The holy family are seated in a Gothic church with a high vaulted ambulatory, before the
high altar, in front of which is a
lattice-patterned decorative carpet. Four angels sit at the corners of the carpet, each holding a gold candlestick marking the sacred space. In the Vienna miniature, the artist achieves the transition from foreground to background by slowly diminishing the figures' scale and plasticity. The foreground interior scene is empty of people, but can again be assumed to be an oratory, and contains an array of attributes and objects of devotion, including a prayer book with black
chemise binding,
prayer beads, a brocade cushion and a number of jewels. As art historian
Susie Nash notes, "Mary [of Burgundy], looking at her prayer book, would see on this page a depiction of the accoutrements of prayer she might also be currently be using in reality, set around the real prayer book in which they are depicted". The women, particularly at the front, wear a variety of exotic and extravagant headgear, of types also seen in the
Virgin and Child, in folio 152v
The Presentation in the Temple, from his
Book of Hours of Engelbert of Nassau, and in attributed miniatures from the "Trivulzio Hours". Nash suggests that this explains why a praying figure is absent from the room before the window – Mary is participating in the actual event. She further notes that
Mary Magdalene, usually closely associated with the crucifixion, is also missing, and speculates that Mary be playing the role normally associated with the Magdalene. The margins of the page are decorated with imaginative and somewhat whimsical flowers, insects and a jewel.
Crucifixion The Crucifixion miniature, folio 99v, shows Christ and the two thieves raised on their crosses over a vast crowd which forms around them in a circular shape. Christ's body is twisted in pain, and painted with particular detail and skill. His chest rises heavily as he gasps for breath, while his body is rendered in delicate proportion. also thought to be by the Master's hand. ==Provenance==