Following the tragic legacy of former King Henry VI and
the awful episode of the War of the Two Roses, Henry VII Tudor gave absolute
priority bringing peace in his country and restoring in Europe the place it lost. The
king especially devoted himself to the implementation of a strong cultural
policy intended to compensate for the delay run up in this field for nearly a
century. As far as plastic arts were concerned, the failure was clear. A
few architectural works could certainly be deceptive but unlike these true talent
pools that were the Italian peninsula, the states of Burgundy, the Netherlands,
the Kingdom of France or even Germany, England did not then have a single praiseworthy
painter. The country was afflicted by such an artistic penury that it was
even necessary to cross the Channel to have his portrait painted. Aware that it
was impossible to invent an English School from scratch on the model, for
example, of the Florentine or Venetian Schools, Henry VII found it more
comfortable to bring in foreign artists.
The foundation at Sheen Palace of the Old Royal Library thus
allowed the creation of a school mainly consisting of Flemish illustrators. In
1492, the illuminator Quentin Poulet, originally from Lille, was called by King
Henry VII to head his library. He had entered in 1477 as an apprentice to
the Confraternity of St John the Evangelist in Bruges where he had been trained
in the art of miniature painting. As the king's librarian, he would embellish
the new institution with numerous French manuscripts and printed works. It is
possible that he brought in painters of manuscripts from Jean Miélot's workshop
(Abbeville 1420 - 1472) to assist him. During his lifetime, canon of the
collegiate church of St Pierre in Lille, Miélot was still an essential
reference. Writer, translator and illuminator, he had also been the private
secretary of the Dukes of Burgundy Philippe III The Good and Charles I The Bold,
then of John of Luxembourg.
In 1496 they were two Flemish illuminators in the exclusive service of the royal library. Their work competed with the best production of the Bruges and Ghent workshops. They even claimed that the quality of the manuscripts produced at the Tudor Court was superior to that of the King of France.
Generous payments to artists by the King of England were certainly not unrelated to the coming of many manuscript painters. However, it was not likewise with other disciplines such as easel painting. Potential sponsors were scarce.
Exhausted, the English nobility was still healing her wounds
after seeing her people tear each other apart during the fratricidal war which
had opposed the York and Lancaster families. Divided equally between
supporters of one or the other of the rival clans, the Church was unable to do
well and faced a degraded financial situation. Unlike other European
courts and the clergy who displayed their power by embellishing palaces and
churches with sculptures, frescoes and huge paintings by a host of talented
artists, England was a poor relation. And attracting the best of them there
was still a dream.
