Why do we call it Carolingian Art? Early Medieval Art in the West On Christmas day of the year 800, Pope Leo III crowned Charles the Great (Charlemagne),

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Edmonia Lewis Forever Free, 1867.
Advertisements

Tuesday Islamic Quiz Early Medieval Tomorrow: Medieval Worksheet DUE!
Slide concept by Anthony F
Early Medieval Art A.D. EC, Byzantine, Early Medieval= 5-10% of AP Art History Exam.
Early Middle Ages C AD Artist as Propagandist.
Objectives Describe Western Europe after the collapse of the western Roman Empire. Describe how Germanic tribes carved Europe into small kingdoms. Explain.
25 Figure Sculptures you need to know…. Edmonia Lewis Forever Free, Forever Free is a representation of the emancipation of African-American slaves.
Outcome: Germanic Kingdoms Emerge & Charlemagne
KNIGHT NOBLE KING PEASANTS Europe during the Middle Ages CHURCH.
DEVELOPMENT OF BOOKS The transition from the scroll to the bound book in this period was critical in the preservation and transmission of learning in Europe.
Chapter Six Early Medieval and Romanesque Europe Prepared by Kelly Donahue-Wallace Randal Wallace University of North Texas Gardner's Art through the Ages,
Vocabulary Cloisone enamel Hiberno-Saxon Illuminated Manuscript Codex Barrel vault Groin vault Transept Ambulatory Radiating chapels Tribunes Compound.
The Migration Period Vocabulary
Byzantine Icons Comparative Civilizations 12 Kevin J. Benoy.
EARLY MEDIEVAL SUMMARY POLITICS & SOCIETY – Charlemagne, Ottonian (German) emperors; FEUDALISM ARCHITECTURE – Romanesque Style ART – relief sculpture.
Historical Timeline Hiberno-Saxon Art - 6 th -8 th C - British Isles Viking Art - 8 th - 11 th C. - Scandinavia/Normandy Carolinian Art - 8 th -9 th C.
Eden Core World History Period 4 Chapter 12:The Low Middle Ages Section 1:Early European Kingdom.
Background Info Achievements:  Crimes: Wanted By: Caution: Description: Name GO TO WEBSITE “RESOURCES” TO FIND OUT MORE ABOUT OPTIONAL BONUS POINTS ON.
Who were the Franks?  One of the many Germanic tribes who helped bring down Rome.  Settled near the Roman province of Gaul.  After the fall of Rome,
Charlemagne Unites Germanic Kingdoms
Early Medieval about 350 years
The Birth of Europe. Merovingians, 457 – – Clovis (466 – 511) united Frankish Gaul. – First “King of the Franks” – Unity provided by conquest.
1 Charlemagne “Charles the Great” and the Holy Roman Empire Lesson
Bell Ringer Why do you think that Christians were persecuted by the Roman Empire? Who was in power during the time when Jesus was born?
Byzantine and Islamic (a.d a.d. 1453)
1/13 Focus: 1/13 Focus: – Through conquest and social change, Charlemagne brought much of western Europe together in a single empire Important Terms: Important.
EARLY MEDIEVAL EUROPE GARDINER CHAPTER 16-2 PP
Age of Charlemagne What was Charlemagne crowned? By who?
The Middle Ages: The Rise of the Franks
EARLY MEDIEVAL EUROPE GARDINER CHAPTER 16-3 PP
h/ Frankish Looped Fibula.
Pope Defended by Franks (Recap.) Military power of Constantinople in decline. Pope needing help against Lombards - found support from developing Empire.
Early Medieval Art highlights
 MA #2 due Thursday  Current events article due Friday.
Charlemagne, Learning and Carolingian Art: Imagine generating all of this “Classical Revival”, in painting, book arts, and architecture as the leader of.
The Middle Ages to fall of Rome to modern era - aka Dark Ages -Key events: revival of learning under Charlemagne, breakup of Charlemagne’s.
Middle Ages: The Age of Charlemagne
The Middle Ages – c. 814 Middle Ages Era 481 CE – First Catholic King Clovis unites the Franks – forms Frankish Kingdom in Gaul – establishes the Merovingian.
7.1 section summary Book shelf corner—strong rulers emergency exit corner—Strong economies Teacher desk—A united religion Hall door—a large middle class.
Merovingian Looped Fibula, Early Medieval Europe. Mid 6 th Century. Silver gily in filigree with garnets and stone.
The Early Middle Ages: The Rise of Europe Geography of Western Europe
Byzantine Culture and Art Greek Orthodox Christianity.
Drawing of the monastery church of St. Riquier
What happened to Western Europe after the decline of the Roman Empire? Do you think the Germanic peoples would have viewed decline of the Roman Empire.
Early Medieval Leaders Note Entry # 32. After the Fall of Rome… By 500 AD the German invasions of Rome had put Western Europe into the “Dark Ages” By.
Frankish Looped Fibula Frankish Round Fibula.
Vocabulary Byzantine Art Early Medieval Art Early Christian Art ?
The Middle Ages. The Collapse of Trade and Towns Warfare disrupted trade. Towns and Cities declined – Without the empire, no need for cities as centers.
Chapters 13, 14 and 15 Early Medieval, Romanesque and Gothic Art.
Artistic Convention A standard, often stylized, way a culture deals with a specific image in art. In these statues from Tel Asmar (Mesopotamia) the human.
Charlemagne: King of the Franks, Emperor of the Romans.
Early Medieval Art in the West
Founder of the Carolingian Empire
Charlemagne, the Carolingians, and the Empire
Early Medieval Art.
Ca. 1000: Ottonian Art.
KEY CONCEPTS for the EARLY MEDIEVAL PERIOD
Early Medieval art- additional information
Aim: How did Charlemagne unite part of Europe after the fall of the Roman Empire? New Topic: Middle Ages.
Charlemagne and the Carolingian Empire
Medieval Art (The Middle Ages)
Chapter 16 Middle Ages (Medieval)
Artist as Propagandist
King of the Franks and Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire
The Franks!.
Early Medieval Art.
Daily Question Manor system lord provides: Peasants provide:
Chapter 14 Notes Medieval Art in Europe.
Early Medieval about 350 years
Presentation transcript:

Why do we call it Carolingian Art? Early Medieval Art in the West On Christmas day of the year 800, Pope Leo III crowned Charles the Great (Charlemagne), King of the Franks since 768, as emperor of Rome (r ) In Charlemagne came to be seen as the first Holy (that is, Christian) Roman Emperor, a title his successors in the West did not formally adopt until the twelfth century. The setting for Charlemagne’s coronation, fittingly, was Saint Peter’s basilica in Rome, built by Constantine, the first Roman emperor to embrace Christianity. Born in 742, when northern Europe was still in chaos, Charlemagne conslidated the Frankish kingdom his father and grandfather bequeathed him and defeated the Lombards in Italy. He thus united Europe and laid claim to reviving the ancient Roman Empire’s glory. He gave his name (Carolus Magnus in Latin) to an entire era, the Carolingian period Charlemagne’s offical seal bore the words renovatio imperii Romani, (the renewal of the Roman Empire). The Carolingian Renaissance was a remarkable historical phenomenon, a brilliant emulation of Early Christian Rome’s art, culture, and political ideals. Charlemagne’s (Holy) Roman Empire, waxing and waning for a thousand years with many hiatuses, existed in central Europe until Napoleon destroyed it in 1806 (detail) Equestrian portrait of Charlemagne Metz, Germany, early ninth century bronze

Carolingian Art Saint Matthew, from the Gospel Book of Archbishop Ebbo of Reims,Hautvillers (near Reims), France, ca Early Medieval Art Figure The Ebbo Gospels illuminator replaced the classical calm and solidity of the Coronation Gospels with an energy that amounts to frenzy, and the frail saint almost leaps under its impulse. His hair stands on end, his eyes open wide, the folds of the drapery writhe and vibrate, the landsccape behind him rears up alive. The painter even set the page's leaf border in motion. Matthew appears to take down in frantic haste what his inspiration dictates. The tiny angel in the upper-right corner is Matthew's inspiration. The angel is dictating to Matthew what he is to write down.

Carolingian Art Early Medieval Art Crucifixion, front cover of the Lindau Gospels, ca. 870 Figure The golden cover of the Lindau Gospels, fashioned in a workshop of Charles the Bald's court, is surrounded by pearls and jewels that are raised on golden claw feet so that they can catch and reflect the light even more brilliantly and protect the delicate metal relief from denting. The figures are rendered in repoussé, or hammered or pressed relief. The youthful Christ brings to mind the beardless unsuffering Christ of the fifth-century ivory casket from Italy. By contrast, the four angels and the personifications of the Moon and the Sun above and the crouching figures of the Virgin Mary and Saint John (and two other figures of uncertain identity) in the quadrants below display the vivacity and nervous energy of the Utrecht Psalter figures. This single eclectic work displays the classical and native stylistic poles of Carolingian art side by side.

Ottonian Art Early Medieval Art Crucifixion, commissioned by Archbishop Gero ca. 970 Figure This Crucifix, carved in oak and then painted and gilded, epitomizes the revival of interest in monumental sculpture during this period. The six-foot-tall image of Christ nailed to the cross is both statue and reliquary [a shrine for sacred relics]. A compartment in the back of the head held the Host. This dramatically different conception of the crucified Savior digresses from the Early Christian image of the youthful Christ triumphant over death in that he is represented as an all-too-human martyr in intense agony. Though the work may seem more similar to the Byzantine representations of a suffering Christ, its emotional power is unparalleled. Blood streaks down his forehead from the (missing) crown of thorns. Christ's body sags under its own weight. The muscles are stretched to the limit - those of his right shoulder and chest seem almost to rip apart.

Ottonian Art Early Medieval Art Annunciation to the Shepherds Reichenau, Germany ca. 970 Figure Although the angel is a far cry from the dynamic marble Nike of Samothrace of Hellenistic times, the framed panel still incorporates much that was at the heart of the classical tradition, including the rocky landscape setting with grazing animals. The golden background betrays, however, knowledge of Byzantine book illumination and mosaic decoration. The angel looms immense above the startled and terrified shepherds, filling the golden sky, and bends on them a fierce and menacing glance as he extends his hand in the gesture of authority and instruction. Emphasized more than the message itself are the power and majesty of God's authority. The artist portrayed it here with the same emotional impact as the electric force of God's violent pointing in the Hildesheim doors.

Ottonian Art Early Medieval Art Otto III enthroned from the Gospel Book of Otto III, Trier,Germany ca 970 Figure Of the three Ottos, Otto III dreamed the most of a revived Christian Roman Empire; indeed, it was his life's obsession. His mother was a Byzantine princess, and he was keenly aware of his descent from both Eastern and Western imperial lines. He moved his court, with its Byzantine ceremonial, to Rome and there set up theatrically the symbols and trappings of Roman imperialism. Otto's romantic dream of imperial unity for Europe never materialized. He died prematurely, at age 21, and, at his own request, was buried beside Charlemagne at Aachen The illuminator represented the emperor enthroned, holding the sceptor and cross-inscribed orb that represent his universal authority, conforming to a Christian imperial iconographic tradition that went back to Constantine. He is flanked by the clergy and the barons (the Christian Church and the state), both aligned in his support. On the facing page (not illustrated), classicizing female personifications of Slavinia, Germany, Gaul, and Rome - the provinces of the Ottonian Empire - bring tribute to the young emperor.