Term
|
Definition
Justinian as World Conqueror (Barberini Ivory)
Mid-6th Century
Byzantium
Carved in five parts (one is lost), the panel shows at the center an emperor, usually identified as Justinian, riding triumphantly
on a re aring horse, while a s tartled, half-hidden barbarian recoils
in fear behind him. Th e dy namic t wisting postures of both horse
and rider and the motif of the spear-thrusting equestrian emperor
are familiar motifs in Roman imperial works (see “Th e Emperors
of New Rome,” page 259), as are t he personifications of bountiful
Earth ( below t he h orse) a nd pa lm-bearing Vi ctory
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Anthemius of Tralles and Isodorus of Miletus
532 CE-537 CE
Byzantium
Aerial view of Hagia Sophia (looking north)
plan and restored cutaway view of Hagia Sophia
Interior of Hagia Sophia
Dome on pendentives and on squinches
Constantinople (Istanbul)
Dome rests on pendatives. It is to be contemplating the heavens (dome with all the windows) Feel like you are in heaven or in another state of being. The light from the windows dematerializes the building, playing a key role in experience. Gives the viewer a feeling that the dome is floating. Mosaics are laid at various angles which diffuse the light. First use of pendentives, excessive use of gold and mosaics. |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
San Vitale, Ravenna, Italy
526-547 CE
Byzantium
Aerial view, plan, interior, Justinia, Bishop Maximianus, and attendants, mosaic on the north wall of apse, Theodora and attendants, mosaic on the south wall of apse.
Central plan church, octagonal plan. Plain on outside doesn't hint to sumptuous marble and mosaic covered interior. Ever changing perspectives, light filtered through alabaster paned windows. plays on mosaics and glowing marbles, one of the greatest achievements in byzantine art, theme is holy ratification of justinian's right to rule. Apse vault- christ sits on the orb of the world, justinian mosaic to right, two united visually and symbolically by imperial purple and haloes. A dozen attendants paralleling the 12 apostles of christ. Mosaic underscored dual role of political and eligious systems. Opposing wall, theodora, both processions move into apse to partake in Eucharist. Justinian carries the bread and theodora the golden cup of wine.
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Saint Matthew, folio 25 of the Lindisfarne Gospels
698 CE-721 CE
Early Medieval Europe
Tempera on Vellum
A Mediterranean book
probably inspired this
Hiberno-Saxon depiction
of Saint Matthew with his
symbol, a winged man.
Th e Lindisfarne Matthew sits in his study composing his account
of the life of Christ. A c urtain sets the scene indoors, as in classical
art (FIG. 5-58), and Matthew’s seat is at an angle, which also suggests
a Mediterranean model employing classical perspective. Th e painter
(or the scribe) labeled Matthew i n a c urious combination of Greek
O Agios, “saint” |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Saint Matthew, folio 15 recto of the Gospel Book of Charlesmagne
800 CE- 810 CE
Early Medieval Europe
Ink and tempera on vellum
ellum Coronation
Gospels (also known as the Gospel Book of Charlemagne), which has a text written in handsome
gold letters. Th e major full-page illuminations, which show the four
Gospel authors at work, reveal that Carolingian manuscript painters brought a radically diff erent stylistic sensibility to t heir work compared with their Hiberno-Saxon counterparts. For example, for the
page depicting Saint Matthew (FIG. 11-13), t he Coronation Gospels
painter, in contrast to the Northumbrian illuminator who painted the
portrait of the same evangelist in the Lindisfarne Gospels (FIG. 11-8),
used c olor a nd mo dulation o f l ight a nd shade , not l ine, to c reate
shapes, and deft , illusionistic brushwork to define the massive drapery folds w rapped a round M atthew’s b ody. Th e c ross-legged c hair,
the lectern, a nd t he saint’s toga a re familiar Roman accessories. In
fact, t his C arolingian e vangelist portrait closely follows t he format
and s tyle o f Gre co-Roman a uthor p ortraits, a s e xemplified b y t he
seated Menander
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Saint Michael's, Hildesheim, Germany
1001 CE-1031 CE
Early Medieval
Built by Bishop Bernward,
a great art patron, Saint
Michael’s is a masterpiece
of Ottonian basilica design.
The church’s two apses,
two transepts, and multiple
towers give it a distinctive
profile. Saint Michael’s entrances are on the side.
Alternating piers and columns divide
the space in the nave into vertical units.
These features transformed the tunnel-like
horizontality of Early Christian basilicas.
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Doors with Relief Panels (Genesis: left door, Life of Christ: right door)
1015 CE
Commissioned by Bishop Bernward for Saint Michaels, bronze
more than 15 feet tall.
Th ey are technological marvels, because the Ottonian metalworkers cast each giant door in a single piece with the figural sculpture.
Bernward’s doors tell the story of original sin and redemption, and draw
parallels between the Old and New Testaments, as in the expulsion from
Paradise and the infancy and suffering of Christ.
Bernward placed the bronze doors in the portal to S aint M ichael’s f rom t he c loister, w here t he
monks would see them each time they entered the
church. Th e panels of the left door illustrate highlights from Genesis, beginning with the Creation
of Eve (at t he top) a nd ending w ith t he murder of
Adam a nd Eve’s son Abel by h is brother, Cain (at
the bottom). Th e right door recounts the life of Jesus (reading from the bottom up), starting with the
Annunciation and terminating with the appearance
to Mary Magdalene of Christ aft er his resurrection
(see “Th e Life of Jesus in Art,” Chapter 8, pages 240–
241). Together, t he do ors tel l t he s tory of original
sin a nd u ltimate re demption, sh owing t he e xpulsion from the Garden of Eden and the path back to
Paradise through the Church.
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Giselbertus, Last Judgement, West tympanum of Saint Lazare
1120 CE-1135 CE
Romanesque Europe
Autun, France, marble
Christ presides over
the separation of
the blessed from the
damned in Gislebertus’s
dramatic vision of
the Last Judgment,
designed to terrify those
guilty of sin and beckon
them into the church. Above Autun Cathedral’s portal, at the far left,
a trumpet-blowing angel announces the second
coming. Another obliging angel boosts one of
the blessed over the fortified walls of Heaven.
Below, the souls of the dead line up to await their fate. Two
men whose travel bags identify them as pilgrims to Jerusalem
and Santiago de Compostela can expect to be judged favorably.
In Gislebertus’s unforgettable rendition
of the weighing of souls on judgment
day, angels and the Devil’s agents
contest at the scales, each trying to
tip the balance for or against a soul.
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Interior of Saint-Serin
1070-1120 CE
Romanesque Europe
Toulouse, France
At Toulouse, the builders increased the length of the nave, doubled the
side aisles, and added a t ransept, ambulatory, a nd radiating chapels to p rovide additional space for pilgrims and the clergy.
Radiating chapels opening onto an ambulatory a lready were a f eature of Vig nory’s
abbey church (FIG. 12-4), but at Toulouse the chapels are greater in
number and open onto the transept as well as the ambulatory.
Th e S aint-Sernin p lan i s e xtremely re gular a nd g eometrically
precise. Th e crossing square, flanked by massive piers a nd marked
off b y he avy a rches, s erved a s t he mo dule f or t he en tire c hurch.
Each nave bay, for example, measures exactly one-half of the crossing s quare, a nd e ach a isle ba y me asures e xactly o ne-quarter. Th e
builders employed similar simple ratios throughout the church.
Th e first suggestion of this kind of planning scheme in medieval
Europe was the Saint Gall monastery plan
Toulouse w as a n
important stop on the pilgrimage road through
southwestern France to Santiago de Compostela (see “Pilgrimage Roads,” pa ge 335). L arge
congregations gat hered at t he sh rines a long
the major pilgrimage routes, and the unknown
architect d esigned S aint-Sernin t o a ccommodate them. Th e grand scale of the building
is apparent
from devastating conflagrations w as no do ubt one of t he attractions of c onstructing m asonry v aults i n a n a ge w hen c andles
and l amps p rovided i nterior i llumination, ot her f actors p robably
played a g reater role i n the decision to make the enormous investment of time and funds required. Th e rapid spread of stone vaulting
throughout Romanesque Europe—beginning in the 11th century at
Cardona (FIG. 12-4A), Tournus (FIG. 12-4B), Toulouse (FIG. 12-7),
Santiago de Compostela (FIG. 12-7B), Speyer (FIG. 12-20), and Milan (FIG. 12-22)—was most likely the result of a desire to provide a
suitably majestic setting for the display of relics as well as enhanced
acoustics for the Christian liturgy and the music accompanying it.
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Pentecost and Mission of the Apostles, tympanum of the center portal of the narthex of La Madeleine
1120-1132 CE
Romanesque Europe
Madeleine, Vezelay, France
In the tympanum of the
church most closely
associated with the
Crusades, light rays
emanating from Christ’s
hands instill the Holy
Spirit in the apostles,
whose mission is to
convert the world’s
heathens.
church’s na rthex. I t dep icts t he Pentecost a nd t he Mission of th e
Apostles. As related in Acts 1:4–9, Christ foretold the 12 apostles
would receive t he power of t he Holy Spirit a nd become w itnesses
of t he t ruth o f t he G ospels t hroughout t he w orld. Th e l ight r ays
emanating from Christ’s hands represent the instilling of the Holy
Spirit i n t he ap ostles ( Acts 2: 1–42) at t he P entecost (the s eventh
Sunday a ft er Easter). Th e ap ostles, holding t he G ospel b ooks, re -
ceive their spiritual assignment to preach the Gospel to all nations.
Th e C hrist figure i s a s plendid c alligraphic d esign. Th e drapery
lines shoot out in rays, break into quick zigzag rhythms, and spin
into whorls, wonderfully conveying t he spiritual light and energ y
flowing f rom Christ over a nd i nto t he equally a nimated apostles.
Th e o verall c omposition, a s w ell a s t he de tailed t reatment o f t he
figures, contrasts with the much more sedate representation of the
second coming
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Virgin and Child (Morgan Madonna)
2nd Half of the 12th Century
Romanesque Europe
Auvergne, France, Painted Wood
Th e Morgan M adonna (FIG. 12-19),
so named because it once belonged to t he American financier and
collector J. P ierpont Morgan, is one example. Th e type, k nown as
the “t hrone o f w isdom” (sedes sapie ntiae i n L atin), i s a w estern
European freestanding version of the Byzantine Th e otokos theme
popular i n icons a nd mosaics (FIGS. 9-18 and 9-19). C hrist holds
a Bible i n h is left ha nd a nd raises h is r ight a rm i n blessing ( both
hands are broken off ). He is the embodiment of the divine wisdom
contained in the holy scriptures. His mother, seated on a w ooden
chair, is in turn the throne of wisdom because her lap is the Christ
Child’s t hrone. A s i n By zantine a rt, b oth M other a nd C hild si t
rigidly upright and are strictly frontal, emotionless figures. But the
intimate scale, the gesture of benediction, the once-bright coloring
of t he ga rments, a nd t he soft modeling of the Virgin’s face make
the group seem much less remote than its Byzantine counterparts.
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Ambulatory and radiating chapels, Abbey church
1140-1144 CE
Gothic Europe
Saint-Denis, France
Abbot Suger’s remodeling of Saint-Denis marked the beginning of Gothic
architecture. Rib vaults with pointed arches spring from slender columns.
Stained-glass windows admit lux nova. A major advantage of the Gothic vault is its flexibility, which
permits t he v aulting o f c ompartments o f v arying shap es, a s at
Saint-Denis (FIG. 13-3). Pointed arches also channel the weight of
the vaults more directly downward than do semicircular arches.
Th e vaults therefore require less buttressing to hold them in place,
in turn permitting the stonemasons to open up the walls and place
large windows beneath the arches. Because pointed arches also lead
the eye upward, they make the vaults appear taller than they are. In
FIG. 13-4, the crown (F) of both the Romanesque (b) and Gothic (c)
vaults is the same height from the pavement, but the Gothic vault
seems t aller. B oth t he physical a nd v isual properties of r ib vaults
with pointed arches aided Gothic builders in their quest for soaring
height in church interiors
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
West Facade, Chartres Cathedral
1145-1155 CE
Gothic Europe
Chartes, France
The Early Gothic west facade was all that remained of Chartres Cathedral
after the 1194 fire. The design still has much in common with Romanesque facades. The rose window is an example of plate tracery.
13-6 Royal Portal, west facade,
Chartres Cathedral, Chartres,
France, ca. 1145–1155.
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.
“most sacred windows.” Th e abbot called the colored light lux nova
(“new light”). Both the new type of vaulting and the use of stained
glass became hallmarks of French Gothic architecture.
Saint-Denis i s a lso t he ke y mo nument o f E arly G othic s culpture. Little of the sculpture Suger commissioned for the west facade
(FIG. 13-3A) of the abbey church survived the French Revolution of
the late 18th century (see Chapter 26). Old engravings reveal Suger
carried on the artistic heritage of Romanesque Burgundy (see Chapter 12) by filling all three portals with sculpture, but Suger’s sculptors
also introduced figures of Old Testament kings, queens, and prophets attached to columns on the jambs of all three doorways.
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Royal Portal, West Facade, CHartes Cathedral
1145-1155
Gothic Europe
Chartes, France
Th e west entrance, the Royal Portal (FIG. 13-6) —so named because
of the figures of k ings and queens flanking its t hree doorways, as
at Saint-Denis—constitutes the most complete surviving ensemble
of Early Gothic sculpture. Th ierry of C hartres, c hancellor of t he
Cathedral S chool o f C hartres f rom 1141 u ntil h is de ath 10 y ears
later, m ay ha ve c onceived t he c omplex i conographical p rogram.
Th e archivolts of the right portal, for example, depict the seven female perso nifications o f t he l iberal a rts w ith t he le arned men o f
antiquity at t heir feet. Th e figures celebrate the revival of classical
scholarship in the 12th century and symbolize human knowledge,
which Th ierry and other leading intellectuals of the era believed led
to true faith (see “Paris, Schoolmen, and Scholasticism” page 372).
Th e sculptures of the Royal Portal (FIG. 13-6) proclaim the majesty a nd power of Christ. To u nite t he t hree doorways iconographically and visually, the sculptors carved episodes from the lives of the
Virgin (Notre Dame) and Christ
on t he c apitals, w hich f orm a
kind o f f rieze l inking o ne en -
trance to t he ne xt. C hrist’s Ascension in to H eaven a ppears in
the tympanum of the left portal.
All a round, i n t he a rchivolts,
are t he sig ns o f t he z odiac a nd
scenes r epresenting t he va rious
labors of the months of the year.
Th ey a re s ymbols of t he c osmic
and e arthly w orlds. Th e Second
Coming is the subject of the central tym panum, a s a t M oissac
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Old Testament Kings and Queen, Jamb Figures, Central doorway of the Royal Portal
1145-1155
Gothic Europe
Chartes Cathedral, Chartres, France
Statues of Old Testament kings and queens
occupy t he ja mbs flanking e ach do orway o f t he Ro yal P ortal
(FIGS. 13-6 and 13-7). Th ey a re t he ro yal a ncestors o f C hrist a nd,
both figuratively a nd l iterally, su pport t he N ew Testament figures
above the doorways. Th ey wear 12th-century clothes, and medieval
observers may have regarded them as images of the kings and queens
of France. (Th is was the motivation for vandalizing the comparable
figures at S aint-Denis d uring t he F rench Re volution.) Th e figures
stand rigidly upright with their elbows held close against their hips.
Th e linear folds of their garments—inherited from the Romanesque
style, along with the elongated proportions—generally echo the vertical lines of the columns behind them. (In this respect, Gothic jamb
statues diff er significantly f rom c lassical ca ryatids; FIG. 5-54. Th e
Gothic figures are attached to columns. Th e classical statues replaced
the columns.) Yet, within and despite this architectural straitjacket,
the statues display the first signs of a new naturalism. Although technically high reliefs, the kings and queens stand out from the plane of
the wall, and, consistent with medieval (and ancient) practice, artists
originally pa inted t he s tatues i n v ivid c olors, en hancing t heir l ifelike appearance. Th e new naturalism is noticeable particularly in the
statues’ heads, where kindly human faces replace the masklike features of most Romanesque figures. At Chartres, a personalization of
appearance began t hat led first to i dealized portraits of t he perfect
Christian and finally, by 1400, to the portraiture of specific individuals. Th e sculptors of the Royal Portal figures initiated
The biblical kings and queens of the Royal Portal are the royal ancestors
of Christ. These Early Gothic jamb figures display the first signs of a new
naturalism in European sculpture.
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Rose window and lancets, North transept, Chartres Cathedral
1220
Gothic Europe
Chartres Cathedral, Chartres, France, stained glass, rose window.
France’s royal
floral emblem—on a blue ground fill the eight narrow windows in the
rose’s lower spandrels. Th e iconography is also fitting for a queen. Th e
enthroned Virgin and Child appear in the roundel at the center of the
rose, which resembles a gem-studded book cover or cloisonné brooch.
Around her are four doves of the Holy Spirit and eight angels. Twelve
square panels contain images of Old Testament kings, including David and Solomon (at the 12 and 1 o’clock positions respectively). Th ese
are t he royal ancestors of Christ. Isaiah (11:1–3) had p rophesied t he
Messiah would come from the family of the patriarch Jesse, father of
David. Th e genealogical “tree of Jesse” is a familiar motif in medieval
art. Below, in the lancets, are Saint Anne and the baby Virgin. Flanking them are four of Christ’s Old Testament ancestors, Melchizedek,
David, Solomon, and Aaron, echoing the royal genealogy of the rose
Immense stained-glass rose and lancet windows, held in place by an
intricate armature of bar tracery, fill almost the entire facade wall of the
High Gothic north transept of Chartres Cathedral.
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Interior of the Upper Chapel, Sainte-Chapelle
1243-1248 CE
Paris, France
Th e s tained-glass w indows
inserted into the portal tympana of Reims Cathedral exemplify the
wall-dissolving H igh G othic a rchitectural s tyle. Th e a rchitect o f
Sainte-Chapelle (FIG. 13-25) in Paris extended this style to an entire
building. Louis IX built Sainte-Chapelle, joined to the royal palace,
as a re pository for the crown of thorns and other relics of Christ’s passion he had p urchased i n 1 239 f rom h is c ousin B aldwin I I
(r. 1228–1261), the Latin emperor of Constantinople. Th e chapel is a
masterpiece of the so-called Rayonnant (radiant) style of the High
Gothic age, which dominated the second half of the 13th century.
It was t he preferred style of t he Parisian court of Saint Louis (see
“Louis I X,” pa ge 385). S ainte-Chapelle’s a rchitect c arried t he d issolution of walls a nd t he reduction of t he bulk of t he supports to
the point that some 6,450 square feet of stained glass make up more
than three-quarters of the structure. Th e supporting elements are
hardly more than large mullions, or v ertical s tone ba rs. Th e emphasis is on the extreme slenderness of the architectural forms and
on linearity in general. Although the chapel required restoration in
the 19th century (aft er suff ering damage during the French Revolution), i t re tains mos t o f i ts o riginal 1 3th-century s tained g lass.
Sainte-Chapelle’s eno rmous w indows filter t he l ight a nd fill the
interior with an unearthly rose-violet atmosphere. Approximately
49 feet h igh a nd 15 feet w ide, t hey were t he l argest s tained-glass
windows designed up to their time.
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Virgin of Jeanne d'Evreux, from the abbey church of Saint-Denis, France,
1339 CE
Gothic Europe
Th e royal family also patronized goldsmiths, silversmiths, and other artists specializing in
the production of luxury works in metal and enamel for churches,
palaces, a nd private h omes. E specially p opular were s tatuettes o f
sacred figures, which the wealthy purchased either for private devotion or as gift s to churches. Th e Virgin Mary was a favored subject,
reflecting her new prominence in the iconography of Gothic portal
sculpture.
Perhaps the finest of these costly statuettes is the large silvergilt figurine k nown as t he Virgin of J eanne d ’Evreux (FIG. 13-37).
Th e F rench que en do nated t he i mage o f t he Vi rgin a nd C hild to
the royal a bbey c hurch of S aint-Denis i n 1339. M ary s tands on a
rectangular base decorated with enamel scenes of Christ’s passion.
(Some a rt h istorians t hink t he ena mels a re J ean P ucelle’s w ork.)
But no hint of grief appears in the beautiful young Mary’s face. Th e
Christ Child, also without a care in the world, playfully reaches for
his mother. Th e elegant proportions of the two figures, Mary’s emphatic swaying posture, the heavy drapery folds, and the intimate
human characterization of mother and son are also features of the
roughly contemporaneous Virgin of Paris (FIG. 13-26). Th e sculptor
of l arge s tone s tatues a nd t he ro yal si lversmith w orking at sm all
scale approached t he re presentation of t he Vi rgin a nd C hild i n a
similar fashion. In both instances, Mary appears not only as the
Mother of Christ but also as the queen of Heaven. Th e Saint-Denis
Mary originally had a crown on her head, and the scepter she holds
is in the form of the fleur-de-lis (compare FIG. 13-17). Th e statuette
also served as a reliquary. Th e Virgin’s scepter contained hairs believed to come from Mary’s head.
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Castle of Love, lid of a jewelry box, Paris, France
1330-1350
Gothic Europe
Gothic a rtists p roduced l uxurious objects for secular as well as religious contexts. Sometimes they
decorated these costly pieces with stories of courtly love inspired by
the romantic literature of the day, such as the account of Lancelot
and Queen Guinevere, wife of King Arthur of Camelot. Th e French
poet Chrétien de Troyes recorded their love aff air in the late 12th
century.
An i nteresting ob ject o f t his t ype i s a w oman’s je welry b ox
adorned with ivory relief panels. Th e theme of the panel illustrated
here (FIG. 13-38) is related to t he a llegorical poem Romance of th e
Rose by Guillaume de Lorris, written around 1225 to 1235 and completed b y J ean de M eung b etween 1 275 a nd 1 280. A t t he le ft , the
sculptor carved the allegory of the siege of the Castle of Love. Gothic
knights at tempt to c apture love’s fortress by shooting flowers from
their bows and hurling baskets of roses over the walls from catapults.
Among t he c astle’s defenders i s Cupid, who a ims h is a rrow at o ne
of t he k nights while a c omrade scales t he walls on a l adder. In t he
lid’s central sections, two knights joust on horseback. Several maidens survey t he contest f rom a ba lcony a nd cheer t he k nights on as
trumpets bl are. A yo uth i n t he c rowd holds a h unting f alcon. Th e
sport w as a f avorite pa stime of t he lei sure c lass i n t he l ate M iddle
Ages. At the right, the victorious knight receives his prize (a bouquet
of roses) from a chastely dressed maiden on horseback. Th e scenes on
the sides of the box include the legend of the unicorn—a white horse
with a single ivory horn, a medieval allegory of female virtue. Only a
virgin could attract the rare animal, and any woman who could do so
thereby demonstrated her mo ral purity. A lthough religious t hemes
monopolized artistic production for churches in the Gothic age, secular themes figured prominently in private contexts. Unfortunately,
very few examples of the latter survive.
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Aerial view of Salisbury Cathedral, Salisbury, England
1220-1258 CE
Gothic Europe
English Gothic churches cannot be mistaken for French ones. Th e English Gothic style reflects
an ae sthetic s ensibility qu ite d iff erent f rom French G othic i n emphasizing l inear pat tern a nd h orizontality i nstead o f s tructural
logic a nd v erticality. S alisbury C athedral ( FIGS. 13-39 to 13-41),
begun in 1220—the same year work started on Amiens Cathedral
(FIGS. 13-19 to 13-21)—embodies t hese esse ntial c haracteristics.
Th e building campaign lasted about 40 years. Th e t wo c athedrals
thus a re a lmost exactly contemporaneous, a nd t he d iff erences between t hem a re i nstructive. A lthough S alisbury’s f acade i ncorporates some of the superficial motifs of French Gothic architecture—
for example, lancet windows and blind arcades with pointed arches
as well as statuary—it presents a striking contrast to French High
Gothic d esigns ( FIGS. 13-21 an d 13-23). Th e E nglish f acade i s a
squat s creen i n f ront of t he nave, w ider t han t he building b ehind
it. Th e architect did not seek to match the soaring height of French
facades or try to make the facade correspond to the three-part division of the interior (nave and two aisles). Diff erent, too, is the emphasis on the great crossing tower (added around 1320–1330), which
dominates the silhouette. Salisbury’s height is modest compared with
that of Amiens and Reims. Because height is not a decisive factor in
the English building, the architect used the flying buttress sparingly.
Equally d istinctive i s S alisbury C athedral’s lo ng re ctilinear
plan (FIG. 13-40), with its double transept and flat eastern end. Th e
latter feature was characteristic of Cistercian (FIG. 12-10A) and English churches s ince R omanesque t imes. Th e i nterior (FIG. 13-41),
although Gothic in its three-story elevation, pointed arches, fourpart rib vaults, compound piers, and t he tracery of t he triforium,
conspicuously departs from the French Gothic style. Th e pier colonnettes stop at the springing of the nave arches and do not connect
with the vault ribs (compare FIGS. 13-19, 13-20, and 13-23A). Instead, the vault ribs rise from corbels in the triforium, producing a
strong horizontal emphasis. Underscoring this horizontality is the
rich color contrast between the light stone of the walls and vaults
and the dark marble (from the Isle of Purbeck in southeastern England) used for the triforium moldings and corbels, compound pier
responds, a nd ot her de tails. I n short, French G othic a rchitecture
may have inspired the design of Salisbury Cathedral, but its builders transformed the French style in accordance with English taste.
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Death of the Virgin, tympanum of left doorway, south transept, Strasbourg Cathedral
1230 CE
Gothic Europe |
|
|