ROMANESQUE EUROPE GARDNER CHAPTER 17-1 PP. 431-437.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Unit XI- Architecture Romanesque and Gothic Architecture Romanesque and Gothic Architecture Copyright 2006; C. Pettinato, RCS High School, All Rights Reserved.
Advertisements

ROMANESQUE EUROPE GARDNER CHAPTER 17-4 PP
15.1. Through out the 13 th and 14 th centuries, the growth of trade kept pace with the growth of cities. Through out the 13 th and 14 th centuries, the.
1 Romanesque In Italy, France and England. 2 Mont Saint Michel (France)
Patronage and Artistic Life
Romanesque Art and Architecture Vocabulary Barrel vault Groin vault Transept Ambulatory Radiating chapels Chevet Tribunes Compound piers Springing Transverse.
Architecture of The Middle Ages. Teacher: “Why do some people call the Middle Ages the Dark Ages?” Student: “Because there were so many knights.”
Chapter 17 - ROMANESQUE Western Europe
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.
Gothic Art “Let there be light!” (Genesis 1:3).
The Gothic Cathedral. THE GOTHIC CATHEDRAL OBJECTIVES Understand the key structural components of the Gothic cathedral Explain the origins of the Gothic.
Medieval Cathedrals. Romanesque Use of the barrel vault which allowed for a taller church Few windows Begin to use stained glass Always cruciform in.
The Medieval Church: The Ultimate Expression of Faith.
The Omnipresence of Religion Medieval:. Old St. Peters once stood on the spot where the Basilica of Saint Peter stands today in Rome from the 4th to 16th.
Chapter 17 ROMANESQUE ART Western Europe
ART AND ARCHITECTURE OF THE MIDDLE AGES. ROMANESQUE STYLE Truly began c Sprang up all over western Europe at the same time…regional differences.
Alan Peterson’s Art History Site
Romanesque Mid 11c. Barbaric wars come to an end Last of the invaders had become Christianized Increase of trade and wealth – towns populated.
Christianity and Medieval Society
Vocabulary Cloisone enamel Hiberno-Saxon Illuminated Manuscript Codex Barrel vault Groin vault Transept Ambulatory Radiating chapels Tribunes Compound.
The Medieval Synthesis in the Arts
Charlemagne and the Rise of Medieval Culture The Carolingian, Monastic, and Romanesque Phases of the Medieval Period Culture and Values – Chapter 09.
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.
El Camino de santiago (The way of Santiago) The Camino de Santiago is a route travelled by pilgrims from all over Spain and across Europe to reach the.
Work by : Esther Gómez, María Herrero, Margarita Zárate and María Ramos.
Medieval Art/Architecture This time period was broken down into 3 Periods: This time period was broken down into 3 Periods: 1) Early Medieval Art
Chapter 14 Lessons One and Two. Early Middle Ages: Early Christian: 200 AD – 550 Dark Ages: Carolingian and Ottonian: Romanesque:
Life and Culture In the Middle Ages
Romanesque Art Slides # Romanesque Characteristics Plain on the outside and decorated with sculptures. Inside is often dark and solemn Use of the.
UNIT 6 FEUDAL EUROPE. Mª Victoria Landa FEUDALISM The political, economic and social system that predominated in Western Europe between the 9 th and 13.
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.
The Christianization of the West Dossier 2. Places of Worship. ●The Church used its wealth to build places of worship: ○ churches. ○ cathedrals. ○ abbeys.
Romanesque Architecture Architectural History ACT 322 Doris Kemp.
The Style in its Social Context
Social Studies 8 Romanesque & Gothic Architecture. K.J. Benoy.
Romanesque Pilgrimage and devotion. New Vocabulary Tympanum Ambulatory Apsidal Chapels Buttressing Archivolts Scriptorium Keep Portal Trumeau Pilasters.
Gothic 1. Gothic Art - Theme “The Quest for Height and Light.” focus on the new light (lux nova) desired by Abbot Suger for St. Denis the competitive.
Architecture of The Middle Ages. Art overview Art in the Middle Ages (also known as the Medieval period) was inseparable from religion. The purpose of.
TIMELINE: The Medieval Period. The Medieval Period The Medieval period or Middle Ages, was named by Renaissance historians to account for the nearly 1000-year.
GOTHIC ARCHITECTURE. What is gothic style and when was it made?? Gothic architecture is a style of architecture used in the high and late medieval period.
Objectives Understand the major regions of Europe in the Romanesque period and be sensitive to the stylistic differences among the regions, especially.
Romanesque VaultingGothic Vaulting.
Pilgrimages and Crusades During the Middle Ages, religious faith led many people to perform extraordinary acts of devotion. For example, most Christians.
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.
Gothic Architecture Architectural History ACT 322 Doris Kemp.
Lecture 19 Crusades I Dr. Ann T. Orlando 29 October
We found examples of central plant (circular or polygonal), inherited from antiquity, but the most used is the basilica, steeped in religious buildings.
Christianity & Medieval Society Chapter 18, Section 3 World History
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.
Chapters 13, 14 and 15 Early Medieval, Romanesque and Gothic Art.
And you thought Pilgrims were just for last Thursday!
10/26 Warm-Up If you had a cathedral…What modern-day celebrity or person of interest would be your “relic”? What is the importance of relics within Medieval.
ROMANESQUE ART ARCHITECTURE.
Chapter 13: Gothic Art.
Early Christian Architecture and Design
Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the answers.
Medieval Architecture
Romanesque Art Slides # 20-23
Gothic Architecture.
Christianity spread through pilgrimage routes and the Crusades.
Presentation transcript:

ROMANESQUE EUROPE GARDNER CHAPTER 17-1 PP

ROMANESQUE EUROPE - BACKGROUND  Romanesque is a title art historians invented to describe medieval art that appeared “Roman-like”  Romanesque designates the history and culture of western Europe between 1050 and 1200  MANOR  LIEGE LORD  VASSALS  FEUDALISM  Rise of cities and trade -> prosperity  Boom in church building

ROMANESQUE EUROPE  Romanesque” broadly designated the history and culture of western Europe between about 1050 and 1200  Feudalism saw the warrior lords of the early Middle Ages eventually settle down and establish themselves as landholding barons  Two great Monastic orders the Cluniac and Cistercian grew in importance. The Cluniacs especially fostered the arts.  The pilgrimage was the principal feature of Medieval Christian life. Shrines housed relics that attracted pilgrims with the most famous being Santiago de Compostela in Spain. Many Romaesque cathedrals were developed as travel way stations enroute to Santiago de Compostela, as well as important spiritual destinations in their own right.  Romanesque architecture varied but has basic style characteristics: overall blocky appearance, a grouping of large, simple, easily definable geometrical masses (rectangles, cubes, cylinders, etc.).

PILGRIMAGES AND THE CULT OF RELICS  RELICS = bones, clothing, body parts, or other objects associated with the holy family or saints  Veneration of relics  PILGRIMAGE -> greatest display of public devotion  Could take more than a year to complete -> hardship and danger -> often undertaken as repentance or last resort  Rome and Jerusalem -> holiest  The tomb of St. James at Santiago de Compostela in N.W. Spain  Led to changes in church design  Established the routes that later became major avenues of commerce and communication

ARCHITECTURE AND ARCHITECTURAL SCULPTURE  Pronounced regional differences in exist in Romanesque art and architecture  Italy retained wooden roofs of the Early Christian style -> stone vaulting was common elsewhere  France and N. Spain -> innovative uses of stone vaulting and some timber-roofed churches

SAINT-ETIENNE, VIGNORY  Interior of Saint-Etienne, Vignory, France,  The timber-roofed abbey church of Saint Stephen at Vignory reveals a kinship w/the three story naves of Ottonian churches -> features and alternate-support system of piers and columns

SAINT-ETIENNE, VIGNORY  Innovative plan of the east end of the Vignory abbey church features an ambulatory around the choir and three semi-circular radiating chapels opening on to it for the display of relics 1 = nave 2 = aisles 3 = choir 4 = ambulatory 5 = radiating chapels

SAINT-SERNIN, TOULOUSE  Aerial view of Saint-Sernin, Toulouse, France,  Pilgrimages were a major catalyst for the art and architecture of the Romanesque period -> clergy vied w/one another to provide magnificent settings for the display of holy relics  “pilgrimage church” -> increased length of nave, doubled the side aisles, added a transept, ambulatory and radiating chapels for viewing relics  Increased pilgrim traffic led to changes in church design

St. Sernin, Toulouse (France) offers good examples of Romanesque architectural qualities.  fireproof ceiling of stone supported by semicircular barrel vaults.  Radiating chapels as separate units projecting from the mass of the building.  Inadequate lighting: the central problem of Romanesque architecture was the development of a masonry vault system that admitted light.  Tribunes, or upper galleries to accommodate large crowds  Ambulatories (extension of aisles around the eastern end) to aide in the circulation of all the people.

SAINT-SERNIN  Groin vaulted tribune galleries housed overflow crowds and buttressed the stone barrel vault over the nave  Groin vaults (X) absorbed pressure from the barrel vault along the nave  Extremely regular and geometric plan  Nave walls w/engaged columns on the piers = compound piers  Transverse arches

TIMBER ROOFS AND STONE VAULTS  Canterbury Cathedral in England  In 1174 it was accidentally set ablaze and destroyed -> big problem -> led to the use of stone vaulting in many churches  Desire to provide majestic setting for display of relics and better acoustics

CHRIST IN MAJESTY  Bernardus Gelduinus, Christ in Majesty, relief in the ambulatory of Saint-Sernin, Toulouse, France, ca. 1096, marble  One of the earliest series of large Romanesque reliefs decorated the pilgrimage church of Saint Sernin  The models were probably Carolingian or Ottonian book covers in metal of ivory  Revival of stonecarving is a hallmark of the Romanesque age  Beautify the house of God -> churches now served the lay public and provided inspiration and educ.

CLUNY III  Restored cutaway view of the third abbey church (Cluny III), Cluny, France,  Primary patrons of Romanesque sculpture were the monks of the CLUNIAC ORDER -> famous for their scholarship, music, and art  Cluny III was the largest church in Europe for 500 years -> largely destroyed today -> had a 500 foot long, three story nave, four aisles, radiating chapels, and slightly pointed stone barrel vaults

CLUNY III