The Style in its Social Context

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Legacy of the High Gothic Achievement: the Rayonnant Mode.
Advertisements

Architectural History
1 Romanesque In Italy, France and England. 2 Mont Saint Michel (France)
Patronage and Artistic Life
Romanesque Architecture and Sculptural Programs key ideas: Latin cross plan coherence of design: unity and symmetry heavy, thick walls and small windows.
Romanesque Art and Architecture Vocabulary Barrel vault Groin vault Transept Ambulatory Radiating chapels Chevet Tribunes Compound piers Springing Transverse.
Romanesque Architecture key ideas: Latin cross plan coherence of design: unity and symmetry heavy, thick walls and small windows the use of a Roman vault—inherently.
Romanesque Art Chapter 15. History William the Conqueror (1066) Capetians in France and the Plantagenets in England Local rulers only in Germany and Italy.
The French Gothic Cathedral Chartres Cathedral (Nôtre-Dame de Chartres), France.
Gardner’s Art Through the Ages, 12e
Gothic Architecture Medieval Europe. Gothic Cathedrals The Gothic period lasted from the late 1100's to the 1500's. Most Romanesque cathedrals had been.
Western Art and Architecture frm 300 to 1400 ad
The Vocabulary of Late Gothic Style
Carolingian and Ottonian Architecture Early Medieval to Carolingian Architecture Early medieval architecture was characterized by plain exteriors. Entrances.
Architecture of Christianity in Eastern Empire: Byzantine Churches.
The Middle Ages By: Jennifer Bruton Sims Spring 2010.
The Medieval Church: The Ultimate Expression of Faith.
Chapter 17 ROMANESQUE ART Western Europe
UNIT Eight: the high middle ages. Romanesque Architecture Links to good romanesque web sites: Santiago de compostella.
Church of St. Etienne Caen, France Canterbury Cathedral Canterbury, England.
ART AND ARCHITECTURE OF THE MIDDLE AGES. ROMANESQUE STYLE Truly began c Sprang up all over western Europe at the same time…regional differences.
Romanesque Mid 11c. Barbaric wars come to an end Last of the invaders had become Christianized Increase of trade and wealth – towns populated.
Romanesque Art in Europe
Vocabulary Cloisone enamel Hiberno-Saxon Illuminated Manuscript Codex Barrel vault Groin vault Transept Ambulatory Radiating chapels Tribunes Compound.
MIDDLE AGE ROMANESQUE ARCHITECTURE Week 10. “Romanesque” describes Western European architecture from the late 10th to the 12th century. The term Romanesque.
MEDIEVAL ART- ROMANESQUE AND GOTHIC. ROMANESQUE ARCHITECTURE This developed once Christian society was stable– from the 8 th century to the 11 th (reaching.
“ A little after the year One Thousand, basilicas began to be built throughout the known land, and especially in Italy and the Gaul territories. And because.
Romanesque Architecture Architectural History ACT 322 Doris Kemp.
ROMANESQUE EUROPE GARDNER CHAPTER 17-1 PP
Chapter 14 Lessons One and Two. Early Middle Ages: Early Christian: 200 AD – 550 Dark Ages: Carolingian and Ottonian: Romanesque:
Architecture of Monotheism in Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages: Jewish and Early Christian Architecture.
Romanesque Art Slides # Romanesque Characteristics Plain on the outside and decorated with sculptures. Inside is often dark and solemn Use of the.
Romanesque 3: What is Romanesque Style?. Benedictine abbey of San Vicente de Cardona (Catalonia), consecrated 1040 The First RomanesqueIII. Design on.
The Romanesque: Between Historicist and Modernist Modes of Design.
Romanesque Art Slides # Romanesque Characteristics Plain on the outside and decorated with sculptures. Inside is often dark and solemn Use of the.
Medieval/Romanesque Architecture Tyler Ray Nelson Stage Décor THE 261.
General Timeline: 509 BC -- Traditional date of founding of Roman Republic BC -- Periclean Age in Athens BC -- Life of Alexander the.
The Christianization of the West Dossier 2. Places of Worship. ●The Church used its wealth to build places of worship: ○ churches. ○ cathedrals. ○ abbeys.
Romanesque Sculpture K.J. Benoy. Introduction  Monumental sculpture in stone did not really revive in the Carolingian and Ottonian periods.  However,
Romanesque Architecture
Romanesque Architecture Architectural History ACT 322 Doris Kemp.
Social Studies 8 Romanesque & Gothic Architecture. K.J. Benoy.
Social Class and Residential Architecture in Medieval Europe.
Romanesque Pilgrimage and devotion. New Vocabulary Tympanum Ambulatory Apsidal Chapels Buttressing Archivolts Scriptorium Keep Portal Trumeau Pilasters.
MEDIEVAL ARCHITECTURE ROMANESQUE STYLE. Main characteristics Latin cross design Round arches Massive stone walls Enormous piers or pillars Great thick.
Sejarah Senibina Barat : BAEA 2115 Naziaty Mohd Yaacob
Medieval World European Gothic Europe Peace between England and France Intermarriage of various royal families Popes victory over the Holy.
Gothic Fu Hui Yan. Gothic Arose in Northern France In the later Renaissance From 2 nd half of the 12 th century to the beginning of the 16 th century.
Key Terms.
Test Review for Chapters 14, 15, 16
Romanesque VaultingGothic Vaulting.
How can we successfully talk about (and write about) architecture?
ROMANESQUE ART. 31. St Foy & Reliquary of St. Foy ( ). Conques, France.
Middle Ages ( AD) Celtic Art, Carolingian Renaissance, Romanesque, Gothic Architecture: St. Sernin Basillica (Romanesque) and Leaning Tower of.
Chapter th & 12 th Century ( ) Increase in church construction due to the following: pilgrimages to visit relics (said to have healing.
We found examples of central plant (circular or polygonal), inherited from antiquity, but the most used is the basilica, steeped in religious buildings.
Romanesque. 11 th and 12 th c. art and architecture throughout Europe. The term Romanesque refers to medieval art that is “Roman-like” in style. Similar.
The Gothic style came to Spain as a result of European influence in the 12th century when late Romanesque alternated with few expressions of pure Gothic.
Art and Architecture of the Renaissance: Compare / Contrast with the Gothic and Rayonnant Periods.
GOTHIC ARCHITECTURE The term Gothic was a negative label applied by Italians to pre-Renaissance art and architecture – referring to the Goth tribes who.
And you thought Pilgrims were just for last Thursday!
Architecture and Art of the Middle Ages. The Middle Ages is a period of European history that lasted from the 5th until the 15th centuries. It began with.
ROMANESQUE ART ARCHITECTURE.
The White Cloak of Churches: Romanesque Art I
Chapter 17.
Gothic Architecture C Height and Light.
Early Christian Architecture and Design
Gothic versus Romanesque Architecture
Medieval Architecture
Romanesque Art Slides # 20-23
Presentation transcript:

The Style in its Social Context The Romanesque: The Style in its Social Context

Late Antique or Early Christian Architecture in the Middle Ages (400-1400) Late Antique or Early Christian Carolingian 780-900 Romanesque 1000-1200 Gothic 1200-1400 c. 1400 Italian Renaissance begins Byzantine Islam

Muslim Empire in 750 Carolingian Empire in 814 I. Historical lead up to the Romanesque period (ad 1000-1250) Muslim Empire in 750 Carolingian Empire in 814 Great Mosque at Cordoba, Spain 784 Carolingian palace chapel, Aachen, Germany, 792-805

I. In the Carolingian period (780-900): Western European monasteries given definitive form

I. Scale and plan of Carolingian basilicas (compared to Early Christian predecessors) Carolingian Carolingian

Carolingian basilicas: vertical emphasis Carolingian Corvey abbey church, 873-85, Germany Carolingian Abbey church of St. Boniface at Fulda, Germany, 790-819

City walls, Avila, Spain, b. 1090 earth and wood fortification I. A. The Carolingian empire and its restoration of monumental architecture was promising, but why didn’t it last? 9th- 10th cen. Viking, Magyar, and Saracen invasions 1. 2. a wood keep City walls, Avila, Spain, b. 1090 earth and wood fortification

ecclesiastical architecture residences of the feudal elite I. B. When did the fortunes of Europe become more conducive to architectural innovation? ecclesiastical architecture residences of the feudal elite merchants’ townhouses great hall 2nd & 3rd floors

return of cut stone masonry I. B. return of cut stone masonry Ste.-Foy at Conques

Ste.-Foy at Conques, France Speyer Cathedral, Speyer, Germany II. Romanesque Style or Design Mode: Context for its visual and spatial sophistication Ste.-Foy at Conques, France (abbey church), 1030-1120 Speyer Cathedral, Speyer, Germany 1030-1106

II. Romanesque architecture (11th cen. - mid 13th cen.): the first European architecture Speyer Cathedral Durham Cathedral Ste.-Foy Pisa Cathedral

II. A. Religious context: Medieval Christian pilgrimage and the cult of relics 4. “Relics mattered more basically than any other fixture of daily existence” (Kostof 301). Reliquary of St. Faith

Pilgrimage road to Santiago de Compostela The “pilgrimage church” type II. A. Pilgrimage road to Santiago de Compostela The “pilgrimage church” type

Abbey of Ste.-Foy at Conques II. A. Abbey of Ste.-Foy at Conques church cloister remains of Ste. Foy’s cloister

tribune gallery Ste.-Foy II. A. 1. New parts of Christian basilicas due to new program requirements (accommodating pilgrims) starting in the 11th century. Ste.-Foy tribune gallery tribune gallery

Ste.-Foy – two views of the south gallery II. A. 1. Ste.-Foy – two views of the south gallery looking east looking west

ambulatory with radiating chapels II. A. 1. Ste.-Foy ambulatory with radiating chapels

II. A. 1. Speyer Cathedral crypt

Ste.-Foy Speyer Cathedral II. B. Competitive aesthetic architectural discourse in c. A.D. 1000 Raoul Glaber’s (monk and historian) commentary: “Just before the third year of the millennium, throughout th ewhole world, but most especially in Italy and Gaul, men began to reconstruct churches, although for the most part the existing ones were properly built and not in the least unworthy. But it seemed as though each Christian community were aiming to surpass all others in the splendor of construction. It was as if the whole world were shaking itself free, shrugging off the burden of the past, and cladding itself everywhere in a white mantle of churches” (Kostof 299). Ste.-Foy Speyer Cathedral

Early Christian basilicas III. The Romanesque exterior: aesthetics of less-Roman, future-oriented form begins in the 11C A. Components of a changed overall appearance from outside Romanesque basilicas in northern Europe Early Christian basilicas Ste.-Foy Speyer Cathedral

Early Christian facade modest basilica silhouette III. A. 1. What happened to the Christian church façade in the Romanesque period? Early Christian facade modest basilica silhouette Romanesque facades in northern Europe St. Peter’s (recon.) Santa Sabina Speyer Cathedral Ste.-Foy

Ste.-Foy Speyer Cathedral III. A. 2. What are some features of the complex massing at the apse end (east) and sometimes the west end as well? Ste.-Foy Speyer Cathedral

double transept: two crossing towers crossing tower III. A. 3. How is the crossing expressed on the exterior? crossing tower double transept: two crossing towers crossing tower Speyer Cathedral Ste.-Foy

Ste.-Foy Speyer Cathedral III. B. Specific qualities of the exterior wall 1. wall subdivided, often hierarchically, into bays Ste.-Foy Speyer Cathedral

single plane separates interior space from exterior III. B. 2. Thick skin of the architectural wall worked out in planes and layers Early Christian S. Sabina in Rome Romanesque Ste.-Foy Romanesque Speyer Cathedral single plane separates interior space from exterior

corbel tables Lombard bands III. B. Speyer Cathedral corbel tables (horizontal) Lombard bands (vertical)

engaged shafts Engaged shafts not guided III. B. 2. a. engaged shafts Engaged shafts not guided by laws of classical proportions. Ste.-Foy engaged shafts

III. B. 2. b. blind arcades Ste.-Foy Speyer Cathedral blind arcade

Speyer Cathedral dwarf gallery III. B. 2. c. arcaded galleries (dwarf galleries) Speyer Cathedral dwarf gallery

wall thickness registered in recessed archivolts III. C. Thickness of Romanesque windows and portals: an impression created by recessed archivolts and multiple jambs Early Christian S. Sabina Romanesque Speyer Cathedral wall thickness registered in recessed archivolts

wall thickness registered in recessed archivolts III. C. wall thickness registered in recessed archivolts archivolt – one of a series of concentric arched mouldings Ste.-Foy

archivolt – one of a series of concentric arched mouldings III. C. archivolt – one of a series of concentric arched mouldings Ste.-Foy - archivolts

Romanesque portal sculpture: Ste.-Foy’s Last Judgment scene III. C. Romanesque portal sculpture: Ste.-Foy’s Last Judgment scene