1 / 14

GOTHIC EUROPE

GOTHIC EUROPE. GARDNER CHAPTER 18-1 PP. 461-468. GOTHIC EUROPE - BACKGROUND.

haruki
Download Presentation

GOTHIC EUROPE

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. GOTHIC EUROPE GARDNER CHAPTER 18-1 PP. 461-468

  2. GOTHIC EUROPE - BACKGROUND • Giorgio Vasari = “the father of art history” -> said the Middle Ages was a period of decline -> Renaissance humanists put Greco-Roman art on a pedestal -> regarded “Gothic” art w/contempt -> considered it ugly and crude • Gothic age -> widespread prosperity and turmoil • The Hundred Years’ War • The Black Death -> 14th century • The Great Schism • A time of profound change -> the focus of intellectual and religious life shifts from monasteries in the countryside to rapidly expanding secular cities

  3. FRENCH GOTHIC • Gothic style first appears in France around 1140 • In the 13th century Gothic style spreads throughout W. Europe • In the 14th century it spreads even further • To the east and south of Europe, the Byzantine and Islamic styles dominated

  4. FRENCH GOTHIC ARCHITECTURE AND ARCHITECTURAL DECORATION • The birthplace of Gothic architecture was Saint-Denis in Paris • Named for Saint Dionysius/Denis who brought Christianity to Gaul • Was the Saint’s tomb and almost all French kings going back to the 6th century -> was the official church of the French kings • Abbot Suger began the rebuilding of Saint-Denis about 1140

  5. SUGER AND SAINT-DENIS • Ambulatory and radiating chapels, abbey church, Saint-Denis, France, 1140-1144 • Abbot Suger’s remodeling of Saint-Denis marked the beginning of Gothic architecture • Rib vaults with pointed arches spring from slender columns • Lightness of the vaults allowed the exterior walls to be opened up and filled with stained-glass • The new type of vaulting and use of stained-glass became hallmarks of French Gothic architecture

  6. ABBOT SUGER AND THE REBUILDING OF SAINT-DENIS • Plan of the east end, abbey church, Saint-Denis, France, 1140-1144 • By using lightweight rib vaults, the builders were able to eliminate walls between the radiating chapels • Suger regarded lavish investment in art as a spiritual aid -> it transports man from inferior world to a higher world -> set the stage for proliferation of costly stained-glass windows and sculptures in cathedrals of the Gothic age

  7. THE GOTHIC RIB VAULT • Diagram(a) and drawings of rib vaults with semicircular(b) and pointed(c) arches • Rib vault’s distinguishing feature is the crossed or diagonal arches under its groins • Pointed arches channel the weight of the rib vaults more directly downward requiring less buttressing • Pointed arches make the vaults appear taller than they are • Rib vaults with pointed arches aided Gothic builders in their quest for soring heights in church interiors

  8. West façade, Chartres Cathedral, France, ca. 1145-1155 • (above) Old Testament kings and queen, jamb statues, central doorway of Royal Portal, Chartres Cathedral

  9. ROYAL PORTAL, CHARTRES • Royal Portal, west façade, Chartres Cathedral, France, ca. 1145-1155 • Most complete surviving ensemble of Early Gothic Sculpture • The sculptures of the Royal Portal proclaim the majesty and power of Christ • The tympana depict, from left to right, Christ’s Ascension, the Second Coming, and Jesus in the lap of the Virgin Mary • Virgin Mary is given a central role in the sculptural program -> this reflects the cult of the Virgin Mary which reaches high point in Gothic period • Called the Royal Portal because of the statues of Old testament kings and queens that decorate the jambs

  10. SCHOLASTICISM AND GOTHIC ART AND ARCHITECTURE • In the Gothic period Paris becomes the intellectual capital of Western Christendom • Paris was a center of learning -> the philosophy of SCHOLASTICISM is developed here • Scholasticism = applying rational a system of rational inquiry to the interpretation of religious belief • It was the dominant Western philosophy of the late Middle Ages • THOMAS AQUINAS -> greatest of the scholastics -> author of SUMMA THEOLOGICA

  11. LAON CATHEDRAL • West façade of Laon Cathedral, Laon, France, begun ca. 1190 • Huge central rose window • Deep porches in front of the doorways • Open structure of the towers • These things distinguish Laon’s Early gothic façade from Romanesque church facades

  12. Interior of Laon Cathedral, France, begun 1190 • The insertion of a TRIFORIUM at Laon broke up the nave wall -> produced the characteristic four-story Early Gothic interior elevation: 1. nave arcade 2. vaulted gallery 3. triforium = band of arcades below the clerestory 4. clerestory

  13. NOTRE DAME, PARIS • Notre-Dame, Paris, France, begun 1163, nave and flying buttresses ca. 1180-1200, remodeled after 1225 • 1130 Louis VI moves his residence to Paris -> It becomes the leading city of France -> needs a new cathedral • Notre-Dame sits on an island in the Seine River called the Ile-de-la-Cite • In place of the triforium over the gallery are stained-glass oculi -> open up the wall and reduce the masonry area • Thinner and taller walls -> introduction of FLYING BUTTRESSES FLYING BUTTRESSES = masonry struts that transfer the thrust of the nave vaults across the roofs of the side aisles and ambulatory to a tall pier rising above the churches exterior wall -> like slender extended fingers holding up the walls

  14. Gothic nave designs evolved from the Early Gothic four-story elevation to the High Gothic three-story elevation of arcade, triforium, and clerestory -> height of the vaults also increased from 80 to 144 feet

More Related