Gothic Sculpture
Gothic Sculpture
Gothic Sculpture
1. DEFINITION
Gothic sculpture continued tasks of sculpture as defined by the Romanesque
period, i.e. sculptural decoration, gates and tombs, but it created new genres, too, e.g.
ecclesiastical statues, winged altarpieces and heraldic stones.
Gothic sculpture was born on the wall, in the middle of the 12th century in Ile-deFrance, when Abbot Suger built the abbey at St. Denis (ca. 1140), considered the first
Gothic building, and soon after the Chartres Cathedral (ca. 1145). Prior to this there had
been no sculpture tradition in Ile-de-France-so sculptors were brought in from Burgundy,
who created the revolutionary figures acting as columns in the Western (Royal) Portal of
Chartres Cathedral-it was an entirely new invention, and would provide the model for a
generation of sculptors.
2. CHARACTERISTICS
-
It is inspired in the nature with sensitive forms that can be easily understood.
Approximation to physical beauty from the spiritual dimensions of their
iconography.
- It is an attempt to present the world as it is. Nature loses idealization.
- Characters gestures and attitudes are human. The character represents
emotions and natural features.
- The characters are full of humanism; they abandon verticality, symmetry and
hieratic positions to adopt mannered gestures with realistic movement.
- They tend to depict emotions such as joy or sadness. Good examples are the
gestures of the Virgin and Saint John in the Calvarias or Pieties.
New problems:
- Depiction of the space
- Volume of the images (anatomy)
- Relation of light and colour
3. WHAT DISTINGUISHES IT FROM THE OTHER PERIODS IN THE
WESTERN CLASSIC PERIOD?
Gothic sculpture evolved from the early stiff and elongated style, still partly
Romanesque, into a spatial nd naturalistic feel in the late 12th and early 13th century.
Influences from surviving ancient Greek and Roman sculptures were incorporated into
the treatment of drapery, facial expression and pose. utch-Burgundian sculptor Claus
Sluter and the taste for naturalism signaled the beginning of the end of Gothic sculpture,
evolving into the classicistic Renaissance style by the end of the 15th century.
a. Bendetto Antelami
b. 1180
c. Bendetto was working with the sculptural
decoration of the Baptistry of Parma, a building of
which he was probably also the architect. He
sculpted a citole player.
a. Giovanni de Cecco
b. 1376
c. The faade of the Siena Cathedral is a beautiful collection of artwork.
Statues, gargoyles, columns, reliefs all carved out of marble.
a. germany
b. c. 1300-25
c. The emotion portrayed is very real. The physical exaggeration
and lurid colour serve to heighten the emotional impact.
Sources:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benedetto_Antelami
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gargoyle
http://skww.wordpress.com/2012/01/10/facade-of-the-duomo-di-siena/
http://www.google.com.ph/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=gargoyles
%20ppt&source=web&cd=3&cad=rja&ved=0CDMQFjAC&url=https%3A%2F
%2Fstaff.rockwood.k12.mo.us%2Fwilhelmlauren%2Fkaleidoscopes%2FDocuments
%2Fgargoyle%2520images.ppt&ei=Aer5UZwNoKzlQWmyoG4CA&usg=AFQjCNEbmgwY7yn05t0MUrRWjhUA3Aj2A&bvm=bv.50165853,d.dGI
http://05varvara.wordpress.com/2012/11/29/virgin-with-the-dead-christ-rottgen-pietabonn-germany-circa-1300-25/