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Romanesque Art




     Feudalism             Urbanization and Christianity
 Agricultural economy         Pilgrimages and Crusades
    -Barons (Nobles)                -travel and trade
   -Vassals (Knights)              -new middle class
-Peasants/serfs (slaves)            -growth of cities
                              -influences of Muslims and
                                        Byzantines
THEME: Romanesque
                        Stone masonry, new vaulting
Church building
                        techniques, “blocky” appearance




   • Build it (block by block) and they will
     come
                  pilgrimages
interior of Saint Etienne
Vignory, France
ca. 1050-1057
Radiating chapels




plan of Saint Etienne
Vignory, France
ca. 1050-1057
Saint-Sernin
Toulouse, France
ca. 1070-1120
Saint-Sernin
Toulouse, France
ca. 1070-1120
Plan of Saint-Sernin
Toulouse, France
ca. 1070-1120
Interior of Santa Sabina, 422, Rome

         *compartments of
        space replaced long
             flat walls

Interior of Saint-Sernin
Toulouse, France
ca. 1070-1120
Barrel Vaulted ceiling




Tribune (second story
      gallery)




    Compound piers
   (engaged columns
       attached)

Nave of Saint-Sernin
Toulouse, France
ca. 1070-1120
St. Catherine’s, Egypt, 565




Bernardus Gelduinus
Christ in Majesty
relief in the ambulatory of Saint-
Sernin
Toulouse, France
ca. 1096
marble
4 ft. 2 in. high
Cluny, France
Restored cutaway view of the third abbey
church (Cluny III)
Cluny, France
ca. 1088-1130
Moissac, France – important stop along pilgrimage to St. James’s tomb at Santiago de
                 Compostela
Tympanum of the south portal of Saint-Pierre
Moissac, France
marble
ca. 1115-1135
Historiated capitals




Cloister of Saint-Pierre
Moissac, France
ca. 1100-1115
marble
piers approximately 6 ft. high
Cloister of Saint-Pierre
Moissac, France
ca. 1100-1115
marble
piers approximately 6 ft. high
Christ in Majesty
with angels and the Twenty-
Four Elders
Tympanum of the south
portal of Saint-Pierre
Moissac, France
marble
ca. 1115-1135
approximately 16 ft. 6 in. wide at
base
Christ in Majesty
with angels and the Twenty-Four Elders
Tympanum of the s. portal of Saint-Pierre
Moissac, France
marble
ca. 1115-1135
approximately 16 ft. 6 in. wide at base
Lions and Old Testament prophet
(Jeremiah or Isaiah?)
From the trumeau of the south portal
of Saint-Pierre
Moissac, France
ca. 1115-1130
marble
approximately life-size
Gislebertus
Last Judgment of West tympanum of
Saint-Lazare
Autun, France
ca. 1120-1135
marble
approximately 21’ wide at base
Gislebertus
Last Judgment (plaster cast)
West tympanum of Saint-Lazare
Autun, France
ca. 1120-1135
marble
approximately 21’ wide at base
THE BLESSED
THE DAMNED
“may this terror terrify those whom earthly error binds, for the horror of these
            images here in this manner truly depicts what will be”
Ascension of Christ and
Mission of the Apostles
Tympanum of the center
portal of the narthex of La
Madeleine
Vézelay, France
1120-1132
Abbey of Notre-Dame
Fontenay, Burgundy, France
1139-47
Initial R with knight fighting
dragon
from the Moralia in Job
from Cîteaux, France
ca. 1115-1125
ink and tempera on vellum
13 3/4 x 9 1/4 in.
Christ in Majesty
apse fresco from Santa María de Muir
near Lérida, Spain
mid-twelfth century
fresco
22 x 24 ft.
Virgin and Child ( Morgan Madonna)
from Auvergne, France
second half of twelfth century
painted wood
2 ft. 7 in. high
Romanesque
       HOLY ROMAN EMPIRE

Church as center of Medieval Life
•Towns outdoing each other building churches  civic pride
•Record keeping, birth, wedding, death, worship
•Medieval masons: master builders, architects and artists
that learn through experience and apprenticeship vs. formal
study
Speyer Cathedral
Speyer,Germany
begun 1030
nave vaults ca.1082-1106
1st Romanesque church in Germany
•Stone roof
•Typical arches and bays
•1st building constructed entirely of
stone in Europe




                            Groin vaults




Interior of Speyer Cathedral
Speyer,Germany
begun 1030
nave vaults ca.1082-1106
Plan of Speyer Cathedral
Speyer, Germany
begun 1030
Dedicated to St. Ambrose
  - Begun in 1080, vaulted
  after an earthquake in 1117




Aerial view of Sant’ Ambrogio
Milan, Italy
late eleventh to early twelfth century
Plan of Sant’ Ambrogio
Milan, Italy
late eleventh to early twelfth century
Interior of Sant’ Ambrogio               -NO CLERESTORY
                                         -Compound piers with 3 huge ribbed groin
Milan, Italy
                                         vaults
late eleventh to early twelfth century
*Role of women in
Romanesque Europe




The Vision of Hildegard of Bingen
Detail of facsimile of a lost folio
in the Scivias by Hildegard of Bingen
from Trier or Bingen, Germany
ca. 1050-1079
Rainer of Huy
Baptism of Christ
Baptismal font
from Notre-Dame-des-Fonts
Liege, Belgium
1107-1118
bronze
2 ft. 1 in. high
Head Reliquary of Saint Alexander
from Stavelot Abbey, Belgium
1145
silver repoussé, gilt bronze, gems, enamel
17 1/2 in. high
Romanesque in
   ITALY
baptistery




                                      cathedral   campanile




Pisa Cathedral complex
Pisa, Italy
cathedral begun 1063
baptistery begun 1153
campanile begun 1174
Pisa Cathedral campanile
Pisa, Italy
begun 1174
Interior of Pisa Cathedral
Pisa, Italy
cathedral begun 1063
Baptistery of San Giovanni
Florence, Italy
Ca. 1059
West façade
San Miniato al Monte
Florence, Italy
1062 and twelfth century
West façade
San Miniato al Monte
Florence, Italy
1062 and twelfth century
Diaphragm arches




Interior of San Miniato al Monte
Florence, Italy
1062 and twelfth century
Wiligelmo
Creation of Adam and Eve, frieze on the west façade, Modena Cathedral
Modena, Italy
ca. 1110
marble
approximately 3 ft. high
Benedetto Antelami,
King David
on the west façade of Fidenza Cathedral
Fidenza, Italy
ca. 1180-1190
marble
approximately life-size
Romanesque
NORMANDY AND ENGLAND
* William the Conqueror buried here in 1087



West façade of Saint-Etienne
Caen, France
begun 1067, ca. 1115-1120
- Converted from timber roof to stone
  masonry vault after 1120

  - Follows vertical element of
  Carolingian architects




Interior of Saint-Etienne (nave)
Caen, France
ca. 1115-1120
The THREE TIERS OF
         CHURCH BAYS

                        Clerestory

                             Gallery



                     Nave/Arcade


Interior of Saint-Etienne (elevation)
Caen, France
ca. 1115-1120
Legacy of William the
 Conqueror (Norman
 Conquest of England in
 1066)




Exterior of Durham Cathedral
Durham, England
begun ca. 1093
ENGLISH INNOVATION: Rib
vaults
•Long narrow nave
•Huge composite piers alternate with
carved columns
•Stone ribs strengthened groin vaults carry
more weight
•Strong VERTICAL emphasis  Gothic
predecessor




Interior of Durham Cathedral
Durham, England
begun ca. 1093
Interior of Durham Cathedral
Durham, England
begun ca. 1093
Cruciform layout, quadrant arches


Plan & transverse section of Durham Cathedral
Durham, England
begun ca. 1093
Funeral of Edward the Confessor         Misnomer – actually an embroidery
procession to Westminster Abbey
detail of the Bayeux Tapestry
From Bayeux Cathedral, Bayeux, France
ca. 1070-1080
embroidered wool on linen
229 ft. 8 in. overall
Battle of Hastings
detail of the Bayeux Tapestry
From Bayeux Cathedral, Bayeux, France
ca. 1070-1080
embroidered wool on linen
229 ft. 8 in. overall
                                        Compare: Column of Trajan
Master Hugo
Moses Expounding the Law
folio 94 recto of the Bury Bible
from Bury Saint Edmunds, England
ca. 1135
ink and tempera on vellum
20 x 14 in.
Signing work vs. anonymity: The role
of the individual artist




Eadwine the Scribe(?)
Eadwine the Scribe at work
folio 283 verso of the Eadwine Psalter
ca. 1160-1170
ink and tempera on vellum

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Romanesque

  • 1. Romanesque Art Feudalism Urbanization and Christianity Agricultural economy Pilgrimages and Crusades -Barons (Nobles) -travel and trade -Vassals (Knights) -new middle class -Peasants/serfs (slaves) -growth of cities -influences of Muslims and Byzantines
  • 2. THEME: Romanesque Stone masonry, new vaulting Church building techniques, “blocky” appearance • Build it (block by block) and they will come pilgrimages
  • 3.
  • 4. interior of Saint Etienne Vignory, France ca. 1050-1057
  • 5. Radiating chapels plan of Saint Etienne Vignory, France ca. 1050-1057
  • 6.
  • 9. Plan of Saint-Sernin Toulouse, France ca. 1070-1120
  • 10. Interior of Santa Sabina, 422, Rome *compartments of space replaced long flat walls Interior of Saint-Sernin Toulouse, France ca. 1070-1120
  • 11. Barrel Vaulted ceiling Tribune (second story gallery) Compound piers (engaged columns attached) Nave of Saint-Sernin Toulouse, France ca. 1070-1120
  • 12.
  • 13. St. Catherine’s, Egypt, 565 Bernardus Gelduinus Christ in Majesty relief in the ambulatory of Saint- Sernin Toulouse, France ca. 1096 marble 4 ft. 2 in. high
  • 15. Restored cutaway view of the third abbey church (Cluny III) Cluny, France ca. 1088-1130
  • 16. Moissac, France – important stop along pilgrimage to St. James’s tomb at Santiago de Compostela
  • 17. Tympanum of the south portal of Saint-Pierre Moissac, France marble ca. 1115-1135
  • 18. Historiated capitals Cloister of Saint-Pierre Moissac, France ca. 1100-1115 marble piers approximately 6 ft. high
  • 19. Cloister of Saint-Pierre Moissac, France ca. 1100-1115 marble piers approximately 6 ft. high
  • 20. Christ in Majesty with angels and the Twenty- Four Elders Tympanum of the south portal of Saint-Pierre Moissac, France marble ca. 1115-1135 approximately 16 ft. 6 in. wide at base
  • 21.
  • 22.
  • 23. Christ in Majesty with angels and the Twenty-Four Elders Tympanum of the s. portal of Saint-Pierre Moissac, France marble ca. 1115-1135 approximately 16 ft. 6 in. wide at base
  • 24. Lions and Old Testament prophet (Jeremiah or Isaiah?) From the trumeau of the south portal of Saint-Pierre Moissac, France ca. 1115-1130 marble approximately life-size
  • 25.
  • 26. Gislebertus Last Judgment of West tympanum of Saint-Lazare Autun, France ca. 1120-1135 marble approximately 21’ wide at base
  • 27. Gislebertus Last Judgment (plaster cast) West tympanum of Saint-Lazare Autun, France ca. 1120-1135 marble approximately 21’ wide at base
  • 28.
  • 30. THE DAMNED “may this terror terrify those whom earthly error binds, for the horror of these images here in this manner truly depicts what will be”
  • 31.
  • 32.
  • 33.
  • 34. Ascension of Christ and Mission of the Apostles Tympanum of the center portal of the narthex of La Madeleine Vézelay, France 1120-1132
  • 35.
  • 36.
  • 37. Abbey of Notre-Dame Fontenay, Burgundy, France 1139-47
  • 38. Initial R with knight fighting dragon from the Moralia in Job from Cîteaux, France ca. 1115-1125 ink and tempera on vellum 13 3/4 x 9 1/4 in.
  • 39.
  • 40. Christ in Majesty apse fresco from Santa María de Muir near Lérida, Spain mid-twelfth century fresco 22 x 24 ft.
  • 41.
  • 42. Virgin and Child ( Morgan Madonna) from Auvergne, France second half of twelfth century painted wood 2 ft. 7 in. high
  • 43.
  • 44. Romanesque HOLY ROMAN EMPIRE Church as center of Medieval Life •Towns outdoing each other building churches  civic pride •Record keeping, birth, wedding, death, worship •Medieval masons: master builders, architects and artists that learn through experience and apprenticeship vs. formal study
  • 46. 1st Romanesque church in Germany •Stone roof •Typical arches and bays •1st building constructed entirely of stone in Europe Groin vaults Interior of Speyer Cathedral Speyer,Germany begun 1030 nave vaults ca.1082-1106
  • 47. Plan of Speyer Cathedral Speyer, Germany begun 1030
  • 48.
  • 49. Dedicated to St. Ambrose - Begun in 1080, vaulted after an earthquake in 1117 Aerial view of Sant’ Ambrogio Milan, Italy late eleventh to early twelfth century
  • 50. Plan of Sant’ Ambrogio Milan, Italy late eleventh to early twelfth century
  • 51. Interior of Sant’ Ambrogio -NO CLERESTORY -Compound piers with 3 huge ribbed groin Milan, Italy vaults late eleventh to early twelfth century
  • 52.
  • 53. *Role of women in Romanesque Europe The Vision of Hildegard of Bingen Detail of facsimile of a lost folio in the Scivias by Hildegard of Bingen from Trier or Bingen, Germany ca. 1050-1079
  • 54.
  • 55. Rainer of Huy Baptism of Christ Baptismal font from Notre-Dame-des-Fonts Liege, Belgium 1107-1118 bronze 2 ft. 1 in. high
  • 56.
  • 57. Head Reliquary of Saint Alexander from Stavelot Abbey, Belgium 1145 silver repoussé, gilt bronze, gems, enamel 17 1/2 in. high
  • 58. Romanesque in ITALY
  • 59.
  • 60. baptistery cathedral campanile Pisa Cathedral complex Pisa, Italy cathedral begun 1063 baptistery begun 1153 campanile begun 1174
  • 61. Pisa Cathedral campanile Pisa, Italy begun 1174
  • 62. Interior of Pisa Cathedral Pisa, Italy cathedral begun 1063
  • 63.
  • 64. Baptistery of San Giovanni Florence, Italy Ca. 1059
  • 65. West façade San Miniato al Monte Florence, Italy 1062 and twelfth century
  • 66. West façade San Miniato al Monte Florence, Italy 1062 and twelfth century
  • 67. Diaphragm arches Interior of San Miniato al Monte Florence, Italy 1062 and twelfth century
  • 68. Wiligelmo Creation of Adam and Eve, frieze on the west façade, Modena Cathedral Modena, Italy ca. 1110 marble approximately 3 ft. high
  • 69.
  • 70.
  • 71. Benedetto Antelami, King David on the west façade of Fidenza Cathedral Fidenza, Italy ca. 1180-1190 marble approximately life-size
  • 73. * William the Conqueror buried here in 1087 West façade of Saint-Etienne Caen, France begun 1067, ca. 1115-1120
  • 74. - Converted from timber roof to stone masonry vault after 1120 - Follows vertical element of Carolingian architects Interior of Saint-Etienne (nave) Caen, France ca. 1115-1120
  • 75. The THREE TIERS OF CHURCH BAYS Clerestory Gallery Nave/Arcade Interior of Saint-Etienne (elevation) Caen, France ca. 1115-1120
  • 76.
  • 77. Legacy of William the Conqueror (Norman Conquest of England in 1066) Exterior of Durham Cathedral Durham, England begun ca. 1093
  • 78. ENGLISH INNOVATION: Rib vaults •Long narrow nave •Huge composite piers alternate with carved columns •Stone ribs strengthened groin vaults carry more weight •Strong VERTICAL emphasis  Gothic predecessor Interior of Durham Cathedral Durham, England begun ca. 1093
  • 79. Interior of Durham Cathedral Durham, England begun ca. 1093
  • 80. Cruciform layout, quadrant arches Plan & transverse section of Durham Cathedral Durham, England begun ca. 1093
  • 81.
  • 82. Funeral of Edward the Confessor Misnomer – actually an embroidery procession to Westminster Abbey detail of the Bayeux Tapestry From Bayeux Cathedral, Bayeux, France ca. 1070-1080 embroidered wool on linen 229 ft. 8 in. overall
  • 83. Battle of Hastings detail of the Bayeux Tapestry From Bayeux Cathedral, Bayeux, France ca. 1070-1080 embroidered wool on linen 229 ft. 8 in. overall Compare: Column of Trajan
  • 84.
  • 85. Master Hugo Moses Expounding the Law folio 94 recto of the Bury Bible from Bury Saint Edmunds, England ca. 1135 ink and tempera on vellum 20 x 14 in.
  • 86.
  • 87. Signing work vs. anonymity: The role of the individual artist Eadwine the Scribe(?) Eadwine the Scribe at work folio 283 verso of the Eadwine Psalter ca. 1160-1170 ink and tempera on vellum

Notes de l'éditeur

  1. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights.
  2. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights.
  3. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights.
  4. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights.
  5. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights.
  6. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights.
  7. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights.
  8. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights. Saint-Sernin ’ s plan resembles those of the churches of Saint James and Saint Martin. The builders provided additional space for curious pilgrims, worshipers, and liturgical processions alike. They increased the length of the nave, doubled the side aisles, attached a series of radiating chapels.
  9. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights. To protect the church from fire the builders placed a semicircular stone barrel vault below the timber-roofed loft. The geometric floor plan is reflected in the nave walls. The engaged columns rise from the bottom of the compound peirs to the vaults springing and continue across the nave as transverse arches.
  10. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights. To protect the church from fire the builders placed a semicircular stone barrel vault below the timber-roofed loft. The geometric floor plan is reflected in the nave walls. The engaged columns rise from the bottom of the compound peirs to the vaults springing and continue across the nave as transverse arches.
  11. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights.
  12. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights. We illustrate in the centerpiece of the group, the figure of Christ in Majesty. Christ sits in a mandorla, his right hand raised in blessing, his left hand resting on an open book inscribed with the words of Pax vobis. Above are the eagle of Saint John and the angel of Saint Matthew. Below are the ox of Saint Luke and the lion of Saint Mark.
  13. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights.
  14. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights.
  15. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights. The vast tympanum that crowns the south portal of Saint Pierre depicts the second Coming of Christ as King and Judge of the world in its last days, a theme already alluded to at Saint Genis-des-Fontaines. As befits his majesty, the enthroned Christ is at the center, reflecting a compositional rule followed since Early Christian times. The signs of the Four Evangelists flank him.
  16. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights. The church ’ s cloister was decorated for the monks alone to see the medieval church cloister expresses the seclusion of the spiritual life, the vita contemplativa. It provided the monks with a foretaste of Paradise. At Moissac a timber-roofed walkway supported by piers and columns surrounds the cloister garth on four sides.
  17. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights. The church ’ s cloister was decorated for the monks alone to see the medieval church cloister expresses the seclusion of the spiritual life, the vita contemplativa. It provided the monks with a foretaste of Paradise. At Moissac a timber-roofed walkway supported by piers and columns surrounds the cloister garth on four sides.
  18. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights. On the trumeau ’ s right face is a prophet identified by some as Jeremiah, by ithers as Isaiah. Whoever the prophet is, he displays the scroll where his prophetic version is written. His position below the apparition of Christ as the apocalyptic Judge is yet another instance of the pairing of Old and New Testment themes.
  19. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights. The vast tympanum that crowns the south portal of Saint Pierre depicts the second Coming of Christ as King and Judge of the world in its last days, a theme already alluded to at Saint Genis-des-Fontaines. As befits his majesty, the enthroned Christ is at the center, reflecting a compositional rule followed since Early Christian times. The signs of the Four Evangelists flank him.
  20. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights. The vast tympanum that crowns the south portal of Saint Pierre depicts the second Coming of Christ as King and Judge of the world in its last days, a theme already alluded to at Saint Genis-des-Fontaines. As befits his majesty, the enthroned Christ is at the center, reflecting a compositional rule followed since Early Christian times. The signs of the Four Evangelists flank him.
  21. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights. On the trumeau ’ s right face is a prophet identified by some as Jeremiah, by ithers as Isaiah. Whoever the prophet is, he displays the scroll where his prophetic version is written. His position below the apparition of Christ as the apocalyptic Judge is yet another instance of the pairing of Old and New Testment themes.
  22. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights.
  23. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights. The Cluniac bishop Etienne de Bage had the cathedral built, and it was consecrated in 1132. At Autun, the Judgment is in progress, announced by four trumpet-blowing angels. In the typanum ’ s center, far large than any other figure, is Christ, enthroned in a mandorla angel support, dispassionately presiding over the separation of the Blessed from the Damned. At the far left, an obliging angel boosts one of the Blessed into the heavenly city.
  24. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights. The Cluniac bishop Etienne de Bage had the cathedral built, and it was consecrated in 1132. At Autun, the Judgment is in progress, announced by four trumpet-blowing angels. In the typanum ’ s center, far large than any other figure, is Christ, enthroned in a mandorla angel support, dispassionately presiding over the separation of the Blessed from the Damned. At the far left, an obliging angel boosts one of the Blessed into the heavenly city.
  25. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights. The Cluniac bishop Etienne de Bage had the cathedral built, and it was consecrated in 1132. At Autun, the Judgment is in progress, announced by four trumpet-blowing angels. In the typanum ’ s center, far large than any other figure, is Christ, enthroned in a mandorla angel support, dispassionately presiding over the separation of the Blessed from the Damned. At the far left, an obliging angel boosts one of the Blessed into the heavenly city.
  26. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights.
  27. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights. Another large tympanum, this one at the church of La Madeleine at Vezelay, not far from Autun, Christ foretold that the Twelve Apostles would receive the power of the Holy Spirit and became the witness of the truth of the Gospels throughout the world. The light rays emanating from Christ ’ s hands represent the instilling of the Holy Spirit in the apostles at the Pentecost.
  28. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights. Another large tympanum, this one at the church of La Madeleine at Vezelay, not far from Autun, Christ foretold that the Twelve Apostles would receive the power of the Holy Spirit and became the witness of the truth of the Gospels throughout the world. The light rays emanating from Christ ’ s hands represent the instilling of the Holy Spirit in the apostles at the Pentecost.
  29. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights.
  30. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights. The church ’ s cloister was decorated for the monks alone to see the medieval church cloister expresses the seclusion of the spiritual life, the vita contemplativa. It provided the monks with a foretaste of Paradise. At Moissac a timber-roofed walkway supported by piers and columns surrounds the cloister garth on four sides.
  31. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights.
  32. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights.
  33. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights. A wooden statuette depicting the Virgin Mary with Christ Child in her lap. The Morgan Madonna so named because it once belonged to the financer and prolific collector J.Pierpont Morgan. The type-known as the Throne of Wisdom, seldes sapientiae-is a western European freestanding version of the Byzantine Theotokos theme popular in icons and mosaics.
  34. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights.
  35. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights. A wooden statuette depicting the Virgin Mary with Christ Child in her lap. The Morgan Madonna so named because it once belonged to the financer and prolific collector J.Pierpont Morgan. The type-known as the Throne of Wisdom, seldes sapientiae-is a western European freestanding version of the Byzantine Theotokos theme popular in icons and mosaics.
  36. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights.
  37. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights. Speyer Cathedral in the German Rhineland is an early example of groin vaults used over a nave. The church was begun in 1030 and was the burial place of the Holy Roman Emperors. Speyer was also the seat of the powerful local bishop.
  38. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights. Speyer Cathedral is a timber-roofed structure. The nave is 45 ft wide and crowns of the vaults are 170 ft high. The builders used crossing, covered by an octagonal dome, as the module for the arrangement of the buildings east end.
  39. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights.
  40. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights. Of the façade bell towers the shorter one dates back to the tenth century while the taller north campanile is a twelfth century addition. The main vaults are slightly domical, rising higher than the transverse arches. The emphatic alternate support system perfectly reflects the plans geometric regularity.
  41. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights. Sant ’ Ambrogio is three aisled and without transept. Each bay consists of full square in the nave flanked by two small squares in each aisle, all covered with groin vaults. An octagonal dome covers the last bay, its windows providing the major light source for the otherwise rather dark interior.
  42. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights. This church erected in honor of Saint Ambrose, Milans first bishop. It has an atrium in the early Christian tradition. A two-story narthex pierced by arches on both levels, two bell towers joined to the building, and over towers of German churches.
  43. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights.
  44. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights.
  45. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights.
  46. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights. RAINER OF HUY, a bronze worker from the Meuse River valley in Belgium, an area renowned for its metalwork. In 1118 her masterfully cast in a single piece the baptismal font for Norte-Dame-des-Fonts in Liege. The bronze basin rests on the foreparts of twelve oxen, a reference to King Solomon ’ s temple. The Old Testament story was thought to prefigure Christ ’ s baptism which is the central scene on Rainer ’ s font.
  47. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights.
  48. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights. A wooden statuette depicting the Virgin Mary with Christ Child in her lap. The Morgan Madonna so named because it once belonged to the financer and prolific collector J.Pierpont Morgan. The type-known as the Throne of Wisdom, seldes sapientiae-is a western European freestanding version of the Byzantine Theotokos theme popular in icons and mosaics.
  49. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights.
  50. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights. The cathedral, its freestanding bell tower, and the baptistery, where infants and converts were initiated into the Christian community, present a rare opportunity to study a coherent group of three Romanesque buildings. Construction of Pisa Cathedral began first-in 1063, the same year work began on saints Mark ’ s in Venice. The cathedral is large, five aisled, and one of the most impressive and majestic of all Romanesque churches.
  51. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights. The cathedral, its freestanding bell tower, and the baptistery, where infants and converts were initiated into the Christian community, present a rare opportunity to study a coherent group of three Romanesque buildings. Construction of Pisa Cathedral began first-in 1063, the same year work began on saints Mark ’ s in Venice. The cathedral is large, five aisled, and one of the most impressive and majestic of all Romanesque churches.
  52. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights. The interior also at first suggests the basilica, with its timber rather than vaulted ceiling and nave arcade of reused Roman columns in unbroken procession. Above the colonnade is a continuous horizontal molding, on which the gallery arcades rest. The striped walls of alternating dark green and cream-colored marble provide a luxurious polychromy that became a hallmark of Tuscan Romanesque and Gothic buildings.
  53. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights.
  54. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights. It sits, as its name implies, on a hillside overlooking the Arno River and the heart of the Florence. The body of the church was completed by 1090, the gable-crowned façade during the twelfth and early thirteenth centuries. Even more than Pisa Cathedral, the structure recalls the Early Christian basilica in plan and elevation, although its elaborate geometric incrustation makes for a rich ornamental effects foreign to the earlier buildings.
  55. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights. It sits, as its name implies, on a hillside overlooking the Arno River and the heart of the Florence. The body of the church was completed by 1090, the gable-crowned façade during the twelfth and early thirteenth centuries. Even more than Pisa Cathedral, the structure recalls the Early Christian basilica in plan and elevation, although its elaborate geometric incrustation makes for a rich ornamental effects foreign to the earlier buildings.
  56. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights. Though at first glance, the lowest level much resembles the patterning of Florence ’ s baptistery, the arcades and panels do not reflect the buildings structure. The façade ’ s upper levels, of much later date than the lowest level are filled capriciously with geometrical shapes that have a purely, ornamental function. The nave is divided into three equal compartments by diaphragm arches. The arches rise from compound piers and brace the rather high, thin walls. They also provide firebreaks beneath the wooden roof and compartmentalize the basilican interior in the manner so popular with most Romansque builders.
  57. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights. The segment shown illustrates the creation and temptation of Adam and Eve the theme employed almost exactly a century earlier on Bishop Bernward ’ s bronze doors to Saint Michael ’ s at Hildesheim. Christ is at the far left, framed by a mandorla held up by angels-a variation on both the motifs and the themes of the lintel at Saint Genis-des-Fontaines and the relief's of Saint-Sernin. The creation of Adam, then Eve, and the serpent ’ s temptation of Eve are to the right.
  58. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights.
  59. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights. The sculptor BENEDETTO ANTELAMI was active in the last quarter of the twelfth century. Several relief's by his hand exist, including Parma Cathedral ’ s pulpit and the portals of that city ’ s baptistery. His elbows are kept close to his body, and his stance is stiff, lacking any hint of the contrapposto that is classical statuary ’ s hallmark. Yet the sculptors conception of this prophet is undeniably rooted in Greco-Roman art.
  60. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights. This church was begun by William of Normandy in 1067 and must have advanced rapidly, as he was buried there in 1087. Saint-Etiennes west façade is a striking design rooted in the tradition of Carolingian and Ottonian westworks , but it displays the increased rationalism of Romanesque architecture. The three story elevation, with its large arched openings, provides more light into the interior.
  61. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights. The diagonal and transverse ribs compose a structural skeleton that partially supports the still fairly massive paneling between them. These vaults rise high enough to provide room for an efficient clerestory. The original design called for a wooden roof until the groin vaults were introduced.
  62. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights. The diagonal and transverse ribs compose a structural skeleton that partially supports the still fairly massive paneling between them. These vaults rise high enough to provide room for an efficient clerestory. The original design called for a wooden roof until the groin vaults were introduced.
  63. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights.
  64. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights. In architecture, it signaled the importation of French Romanesque building and design methods. It was begun around 1093, in the generation following the Norman conquest, and is the centerpiece of a monastery, cathedral, and fortified-castle complex on the Scottish frontier. The church ’ s vaulted interior which predates that of the remodeled Saint-Etienne at Caen, retains its original severe Romanesque appearance.
  65. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights. In architecture, it signaled the importation of French Romanesque building and design methods. It was begun around 1093, in the generation following the Norman conquest, and is the centerpiece of a monastery, cathedral, and fortified-castle complex on the Scottish frontier. The church ’ s vaulted interior which predates that of the remodeled Saint-Etienne at Caen, retains its original severe Romanesque appearance.
  66. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights. In architecture, it signaled the importation of French Romanesque building and design methods. It was begun around 1093, in the generation following the Norman conquest, and is the centerpiece of a monastery, cathedral, and fortified-castle complex on the Scottish frontier. The church ’ s vaulted interior which predates that of the remodeled Saint-Etienne at Caen, retains its original severe Romanesque appearance.
  67. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights. Durham Cathedral ’ s plan is typically English with its long, slender proportions. Our longitudinal section reveals that simple quadrant arches were used in place of groin vaults in the tribune. The structural descendants of the Durham quadrant arches are the flying buttresses that epitomize the mature Gothic solution to church construction “ The Gothic Cathedral ” .
  68. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights.
  69. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights.
  70. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights.
  71. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights.
  72. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights.
  73. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights.
  74. Slide concept by William V. Ganis, PhD FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY For publication, reproduction or transmission of images, please contact individual artists, estates, photographers and exhibiting institutions for permissions and rights.