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The Middle Ages

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Title: The Middle Ages


1
The Middle Ages
  • Life after the fall of Rome

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  • Fall of Rome begins the Dark Ages
  • A. 400 AD 800 AD
  • B. Barbarian invasions destroyed 3,000 years of
    art, history, and learning
  • C. major effects
  • 1. cultural leadership shifted from the
    Mediterranean to France, Germany and Great
    Britain (England)
  • 2. political leadership moved from secular
    (non religious) to the Christian (Catholic)
    church
  • 3. Paganism was wiped out

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  • 4. art emphasis shifted from man-centered
    beauty of the here-and-now to the here-after,
  • human body viewed as corrupt and evil
  • a. Nudes forbidden
  • b. Greco-Roman ideals of harmony, balance
  • and proportion between body and mind lost
  • D. Medieval art emphasized the human soul
  • E. art became the servant of the Church
  • F. Church taught DIVINE (GODLY) beauty could
    be understood thru material beauty (beginning of
    magnificent cathedrals)
  • G. Christian architecture turned the
    Greco-Roman temple inside out -

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  • 1. simple on the outside, very rich and
    decorated on the inside

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Greek vs. Christian
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Inside an early Christian church
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  • I. Three styles developed
  • 1. Byzantine
  • 2. Romanesque
  • 3. Gothic
  • II. Byzantine art and architecture
  • A. from Eastern Mediterranean 330-1453 AD
  • B. named after the city of Byzantium (later
    changed to Constantinople) in Turkey
  • C. Combined early Christian art w/
    Greek/Oriental designs and brilliant colors

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  • D. Byzantine art CONVENTIONS
  • 1. complex
  • 2. formal
  • 3. rigid frontal poses
  • 4. wide staring eyes
  • 5. tall, slim figures (thiness holiness)
  • 6. almond-shaped faces
  • 7. no hint of movement
  • 8. mostly holy figures with halos
  • 9. no backgrounds in artwork

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Empress Theodora
  • An actress, she married Justinian I, even
    though it was against the law.
  • During the Nika revolt, she saved Justinians
    empire. (He was going to flee and she convinced
    him to stay and fight)

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(copy) Emperor Justinian and his attendants
  • Note they almost seem to be
  • floating off the ground
  • the gold background is heavenly,
  • the figures are tall and slim (monks took a vow
    of poverty, so thin holy)
  • 4.no suggestion of bodies under the robes

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  • E. Byzantine art features mosaics, carved ivory,
    miniature paintings and ICONS small wooden
    panel paintings thought to have magical
    properties
  • Tesserae glass embedded with color to create
    vibrant, colorful mosaics

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(copy) Icons painted on wooden panels
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  • F. Byzantine architecture
  • 1. Most famous The Sophia Hagia (Church of
    the
  • Holy Wisdom)
  • 2. merged Roman and Eastern styles
  • 3. PENDENTIVES engineering break-thru
  • a. four arches support weight of
    dome
  • b. Allows for a soaring interior with
    no columns
  • to bear the weight
  • c. 40 arched windows circle base
    of dome
  • gives illusion that the dome is resting
    on a halo
  • of light

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Hagia Sophia
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inside
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(copy) Romanesque
  • Due to the weight of the stone ceiling, the walls
    of the church had to be very thick.  Windows had
    to be small to keep the strength of the wall
    strong.  Because of this, the churches interior
    was dim.  This was not solved till the gothic
    church design was used. 

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Romanesque
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(copy) II. Romanesque
  • Used elements of Roman architecture
  • 11th C. to 12th C.
  • Barbarian and Islamic attacks ended
  • Crusades brought back Oriental/Byzantine
    influences to Western Europe
  • Middle class began to emerge (craftsmen and
    merchants)

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(copy) II. Romanesque Churches
  • Enter at West
  • Worship towards East (toward Jerusalem)
  • Terms
  • 1. NAVE congregation
  • 2. LANTERNS towers on either side of
    entrance
  • 3. APSE large semi-circular area at choir
    end of church usually contains altar
  • 4. AMBULATORIES walkway around apse
  • 5. TRANSEPT intersects the nave at 1
    end in a cross shaped church
  • 6. CROSSINGS where nave and transept
    intercept

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  • D. Vaults - ceilings of stone that replaced
    burnable wooden roofs
  • 1.Barrel vault - semi cylindrical ceiling
  • 2. groined vault formed by intersection of
    2 barrel vaults
  • 3. ribbed vault system of self-supporting
    ribs and web of thinner material filling spaces
    between ribs

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  • E. Monastaries churches that included living
    quarters for monks also called Abbeys
  • 1. cloisters living quarters for monks
  • 2. cathedrals churches for Bishops
    include
  • cathedra a chair in center of altar
    area

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Barrel vault 1. barrel vault- semi cylindrical
ceiling
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Groin vault
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Ribbed vault system of self-supporting ribs and
web of thinner material filling spaces between
the ribs
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Ribbed vaults
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Romanesque
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(copy) II. Romanesque sculpture
  • Sculpture designed to help people understand
    church teachings
  • Sculpture is part of the structure tops of
    capitals of columns
  • Some found over doors and under arches
  • Sometimes placed in niches
  • Sculpture is EXPRESSIONISTIC emphasizes a
    strong emotional response rather than a natural
    appearance
  • 1. sculpure is thin to show vow of poverty
    which holiness

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(copy) III. Romanesque art
  • Painting mostly frescoes
  • Illuminated manuscripts monks copy scripture
    (Bible) and EMBELLISH (decorate) page with
    fanciful letters and drawings
  • 1. used parchment/vellum (calf skin), ink,
    tempura, and gold
  • Stained glass mixed color with glass, made
    large jewel-tone sheets that could be cut into
    shapes and held in place with lead channels
  • Tapestry embroidered wool that tells a story
  • 1. Bayeux tapestry tells of William the
    Conquerors invasion of England in 1066
  • E. Mosaics continue, begin to add backgrounds

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(copy) Illuminated Manuscripts
  • Medieval Monks worked tirelessly in the
    scriptoriums to hand print the Bible and other
    important texts.
  • The pages were made of parchment, aka, vellum.
    This is made from calf skin.

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Bayeux Tapestry
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230 feet long, 20 inches wide
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(copy) IV. Gothic
  • 12th C to the Renaissance (15th C)
  • Only art style to date that can be traced to 1
    person
  • place
  • Abbot Suger (France) re-designs his church
  • 1. light represents God
  • 2. enlarged apse and huge windows to let
    in light
  • 3. developed an architecture of SUPPORTS
    not walls allowed for massive use of STAINED
    GLASS
  • D. Elements of Gothic architecture
  • 1. Unity principles of design that relate
    to the oneness or wholeness of a work of art

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Flying Buttresses allows Gothic cathedrals to
reach incredible heights
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  • 2. façade outside of building decorated
    as much as
  • inside 1st time outside/inside given
    equal importance
  • a. figures still long and lean
  • b. drapery still thin straight
  • c. In 13th C., sculptors begin to
    ALMOST do in-the-
  • round statues
  • d. When works of Aristotle
    re-discovered, body is no
  • longer despised, but seen as
    envelope of the soul
  • (begins a return to realism)
  • 3. Verticality (by reality and illusion)
    Church is reaching to
  • heaven
  • 4. pointed arches (stronger than rounded)

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  • 5. TRACERY carvings that cover arches
  • 6. Rose or wheel windows huge circular
    windows
  • made of colored glass
  • 7. FLYING BUTTRESSES outside supports
    made of
  • a buttress and flying arch (allowed
    glass to take the
  • place of stone walls
  • 8. Sometimes called Stone Bibles because
    tracery,
  • stained glass, sculpture and paintings
    to tell the
  • story of the Bible

52
The flying buttresses pushes against the wall,
making it stronger
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Computer generated aerial view
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Gargoyles a reminder of Hell
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Andas rainspouts
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Façade (front of building)Doorway is called
PORTAL
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Arched vaults made the cathedrals taller and
provided an illusion of height
60
Cologne cathedral, Germany
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Gothic slowly returning to realism
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Notre Dame, Paris
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Notre Dame, Chartres
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(copy) Romanesque vs. Gothic
  • Barrel or groin groin or ribbed
  • Rounded arches pointed arches
  • Thick walls, buttresses flying
    buttresses
  • Small windows lg. stained
    glass
  • Horizontal emphasis vertical
    emphasis
  • Plain façade decorated façade
  • Dark, gloomy inside tall, filled
    with light

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Stone Bibles
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Stained Glass stone walls were replaced with
magnificent colored glass
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Rose or Wheel window
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The despised human body began to be seen in a
different light
  • As the envelope that contains the soul

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  • Hieronymus Bosh one of the few artists whose
    name we know.
  • Works include Garden of Earthly Delights
  • (tryptich 3 panels)
  • Removing the Stone of Madness

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Removing the Stone of Madness
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