Early Medieval Art
Early Medieval Art
Early Medieval Art
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EARLY MEDIEVAL ART
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EARLY
MEDIEVAL ART
WITH ILLUSTRATIONS FROM THE
BRITISH MUSEUM COLLECTION
Ernst Kitzinger
Chapter
PREFACE TO AMERICAN EDITION
Ernst Kitzinger
Dumbarton Oaks
Washington, D.C.
EARLY MEDIEVAL ART
Gold ornament with hunting scene, from Asia Minor
Fourth century (t). [See p. 26.)
I
,, It was during the third and fourth centuries a.d. that the
--^^'-f ./Christians began to adapt classical art to their purposes. Wc
have httle evidence of what one may properly call artistic
LATE ANTIQUE AND EARLY CHRISTIAN PERIODS 3
and sculptures of the third and fourth centuries and the con-
temporary pagan work. Catacomb paintings are executed in
the familiar manner of the wall-decorations of Roman houses.
The style in both cases is a debased version of the impressionistic
maimer evolved in the early days of the Roman Empire and
seen to best advantage in the frescoes of Pompeii. The paintings
EARLY MEDIEVAL ART
of the Early Christian period are all executed in this sketchy,
how different the principle is here. We shall see that this tin-
I
the attempt to superimpose some abstract principle on the
1 natural forms of Graeco-Roman art. hi various ways, differing
from one region to another, the border countries of the
I
Roman world opposed dehberate stylization to the reahsm of
I- classical art.
In the Latin area Italy was stiU the focus of cultural life.
l8 EARLY MEDIEVAL ART
although Spain and Southern France also took part in the
development. It w^ould be wrong to assume that after the
of the Empire more clearly than any other region. By the time
Christianity attained official recognition, in a.d. 313, the most
monuments in Rome were treated in a frankly
representative
and 'primitive' style, as, for example, the rehefs made
abstract
immediately after that date for the Arch of Constantine. With
LATE ANTIQUE AND EARLY CHRISTIAN PERIODS ip
Christian art..
famous.
These centres had played a leading part in the later stages of
the evolution of Greek art. Greek and Greek
taste style had
taken root there, and when, in the third and fourth centuries,
(Plate 12) and the ivory diptych leaf with the figure of an
Archangel (Plate 8).
The Cotton Genesis, the earliest illustrated biblical manu-
script known in the Greek world, is almost universally regarded
as the work of an Alexandrian painter of the early fifth century.
them, and for the sake of simplification figures are often shown \
still tried to give a reahstic and vivid illustration of his story and.
'U-
rehef.
The Hellenistic tradition in the Eastern Mediterranean coun-
tries is a vitally important factor in the general evolution. It has
often been said that it is not a feature of those regions in general,
but more especially of Alexandria, which alone is supposed to
have continued to act as a focus of Hellenistic
and civflization
tive subjects like the Adoration of the Magi are turned into
hieratic images, and it may well be that our ivory panel comes
from the Holy Land rather than from the Bosphorus. But it
is, nevertheless, a typically Byzantine work. The artist was
famihar, not only vidth the hieratic but also with the Hellenistic
style, for beneath the solemn Adoration scene he represented
the Nativity in a much less stiff and more classical manner.
Nothing could show more clearly the duahty of styles
prevailing in these regions. Situated on the border-line between
two worlds, the Greek and the Oriental, Byzantium evolved
two entirely different modes of expression. It dehghted in
^
reminiscences of the hfelike, free and dehcate art of the Greeks,
\and at the same time it adopted the cold splendour and gloomy
austerity of Asiatic art, appropriate to an age of strict pohtical
and cultural organization and intellectual and rehgious coercion.
Greek style, textiles were decorated with putti and other gay
and colourful designs of classical origin, and buildings were
LATE ANTIQUE AND EARLY CHRISTIAN PERIODS 3I
ship to Byzantium. We
have said before that Byzantine art
penetrate^ into the provinces, and in some of the regions named
we find monuments which might have been made in the capital,
so httle do they from the work of Constantinople. As
differ
opposed to this international element the works which we have
now discussed represent the local and indigenous styles of the
various provinces. Naturally there is not always a clear division
CAROLINGIAN ART
figures for the purpose of decorative design and even the por-
trait-busts and horsemen on Roman coins. They transformed
these reahstic motives almost beyond recognition, treating
them first splitting them up and
exactly like abstract patterns,
then mixing their details in a most illogical manner. Animals of
fantastic shape were juxtaposed in rows, and their hmbs were
interlaced so as to form hybrid and intricate all-over patterns.
With the spread of Christianity in the seventh century the nln
first contacts with the Christian art of the Mediterranean were
-
parts of the picture, the human and the bird no less than
figure
the chair, are treated as one big ornament. Nothing is more
telling in this connection than the way in which the inscriptions
are placed; they too are a part of the pattern, counterbalancing
the eagle above the saint's head, and together with him they
form a display of perfect, if asymmetric, harmony. The empty
ground is used to set off this pattern, and the effect is that of an
openwork ornament on a metal foil.
Being based on models of an entirely different character these
portraits are the best witoesses to the artists' unfailing taste for
ornamental design. With his
frankly abstract and unnaturaHstic
approach to his subject, theNorthern painter succeeds almost
at the first attempt in creating that true image of a saint, wholly
CAROLINGIAN ART 4I
appreciate and reproduce the outside world for its own sake. >
was to determine its character for ever after, and far from
confining itself to purely formal imitation of Roman or Byzan-
tine work it soon produced masterpieces hke the Utrecht-/
Psalter and the Crystal of Lothar (Plate 25), whose figure-
subjects, clearly based on Mediterranean models, are rendered
with such a Hvely sense of movement and drama, of vivid
gesture and reahstic expression, that the artist must be credited
with having excelled his Mediterranean forerunners in their
OAvn sphere. The classical forms in these cases are hardly more
IUmaW
42 EARLY MEDIEVAL ART
than the raw material beaten into a new shape by artists with a
fresh and unblunted power of observation. Charlemagne did
not merely aim at a superficial imitation of imagery;
classical
f<^'
bi^
44 EARLY MEDIEVAL ART
painted at tlic time of Charlemagne himself and traditionally
known as the 'Palace Group', which are genuinely Byzantine.
One of them is inscribed with a characteristically Greek name,
and there can be httle doubt that direct influence from the East-
em Empire is responsible for their style. At the time of Charle-
magne's immediate successors in the second quarter of the ninth
century we fmd the miniaturists of Rheims following the
model of this group, and in their hands the sketchy impres-
sionistic manner of the Greek prototypes finds its most faithful
shows such a page from our Ada manuscript; the small scene
inside the letter Q
is of secondary importance.
by side.
The old contrast between Greek reaHstic and Latin abstract art,
which covers the head like a cap and is separated from the face
by a neat, sharp stroke. The figures seem to have contracted
themselves into a block; they are harder and colder, and,
although they can still gesticulate expressively, there is no real
communication between them.
But for all their symptoms of degeneracy these ivories are
still typical examples of the Carolingian style. They illustrate
54 EARLY MEDIEVAL ART
the survival of this art well into the tenth century. In the early
years of that century the Prankish Empire collapsed but the
innumerable works of art created under the auspices of Charle-
magne and his successors continued to be used as models in all
the countries to which their influence had spread.
Ill
Asia ever since the early Byzantine period, now flourished more
60 EARLY MEDIEVAL ART
than ever. On a page from an eleventh-century Psalter (Plate
3 5) the Israehtes are seen gathering the manna and roasting the
quails which God had sent them. These minute and Uvely
scenes, strewn loosely and unconventionally over the margin
of the text, are the only illustrations in this book of a style
which had been practised in those regions for centuries.
the reformed monasteries, and this accounts both for the move-
ments being simultaneous and for the individuahty of styles in
the various countries. In Germany an additional stimulus was
provided by the revival of the imperial power under the Saxon
dynasty, and since many of the outstanding works of the period
between 970 and 1050 owe their existence to the patronage of
the emperorsfrom Otto I onwards, this whole phase of German
art is usually known as the Ottoman period.
this nervous and excited manner agreed with their own inten-
tions. They would never have been wiUing or able to
either
give such a faithful rendering of a style so difficult and seem-
ingly inimitable in its dehcate impressionism, had it not con-
tained what they themselves desired to express.
Most Enghsh drawings of that period are strongly influenced
by the Utrecht Psalter, although the degree in which the style
of the original has been followed varies considerably. Plate 29B,
also from a Canterbury manuscript, shows many typical fea-
tures of the Utrecht style, the curved bodies, with their round
fantastic.
displayed with the Hveliness and richness of detail which brush /T^
and colours alone are able to give. In composing these the artists
found a model in the cycles of illustrations in Early Christian
and Byzantine manuscripts. The stories of Christ's childhood,
His miracles and Passion, are adapted from these models, and
from them the Ottoman miniatures inherit a wealth of narrative
detail and secondary figures to accompany the main events. The
curved and twisted by emotion, and arms and legs undergo the
most incredible contortions, it is in Asiatic miniatures that they
fmd their closest parallels.
This vigorous expressiveness no less characteristic a feature
is
tenth and early eleventh century. France did not develop its
his figures with a firm and steady hand. They are often stiff and
flat, but always clearly and neatly outlined. If there is any
ing, but the fact that figure scenes are treated hke ornament and
strewn with a variety of patterns as though they were a carpet
(Plate 31) is also in accordance with oriental taste. There is a
TENTH AND ELEVENTH CENTURIES 77
completely non-naturalistic colour scheme. Only strong, out-
spoken tones are used, and the painters take a deHght in dazzling
contrasts, redand yellow being specially favoured.
Often, too, this style, with its purely ornamental interpreta-
tion of the outside world, reminds us of
Irish art, and there are
TWELFTH CENTURY
ROMANESQUE ART
It is difficult to draw an exact line between the period with
ivory of about a.d. igoo (Plate 26), for instance, has a strong
Romanesque flavour, and Southern French and Spanish works
with their archaic character are a priori akin to the new style.
nave, are the divine revelation on which the walls of the Church
rest. The cathedral proclaims in a concrete and visible form the
by the Christian Church. But from the latter part of the eleventh
century, architecture, large-scale painting and sculpture, come
to the fore. A museum exhibition case with small and isolated
TWELFTH CENTURY ROMANESQUE ART 83
ground-plan ot a building.
articulate it, as
it
, .
they are no longer separate leaves but are fused with the script
into one indissoluble unit. They are comer-stones, intended to
emphasize the structure of the sacred text. Nowhere is there a
more apparent desire for large-scale organization and architec-
tural order or a greater aversion to anything loose and indefinite.
It is that spirit, in which goldsmiths and other metalworkers
designed censers, chaHces and other hturgical objects in
architectural shape. We may note especially the domed reh-
quaries of the Romanesque period, and the shrines in basihca
form. In many cases they were probably meant to symbohze a
sacred building. But at the same time the aim was not to pro-
duce reahstic imitations of houses or churches in a miniature
scale. What may be called the doll's-house taste does not
develop until the end of the Middle Ages. In the Romanesque
period the artists were concerned with monumental rather than
reahstic effects. This is shown by the censer-cover on Plate 39.
and tangible.
This new reahsm is particularly striking in those schools of
painting and sculpture which in the course of the twelfth
century under fresh Byzantine influence. Byzantine art, in
fell
time in the West (compare Plate 37 with Plate 42). While the
hieratic tendencies of the tenth and eleventh centuries seem to
have been, at least tosome extent, imported from Byzantium
to the West, this systematic organization of figures and
ornament is more probably a sign of Western Romanesque
taste making at least a faint impression on the contemporary
art of the East.
doing in words.
Romanesque art represents the fulfilment of the task under-
taken by artists when, at the end of the classical period, they
began to lose touch with reahty and broke up the harmonies
created by the Greeks, in order to give expression to new
creeds such as the cult of the emperor and the Christian rehgion.
A long and arduous path had to be trodden before the new
transcendental tendencies, which at first seemed almost entirely
negative and merely a symptom of decadence, had assumed
styhstic forms which are a complete and positive expression of
a new conception of the world. The decisive moment came
when in the CaroHngian age the Mediterranean heritage was
taken over by the peoples of the North, whose tradition of
whoUy abstract and ornamental art enabled them to give visible
formto purely transcendental relationships. By applying in the
following centuries the principles of this art to the descriptive
paintings and sculptures taken over from the South, a perfect
subordination of matter to abstract harmony was effected, and
that is the essence of Romanesque art.
Thus during the early Middle Ages, which are still too often
regarded merely as a hiatus, the entire foundations of European
art were changed, and a new and great ideal found full expres-
sion. Romanesque art does not represent a beginning but a fmal
synthesis. While Gothic art continued along these lines a
TWELFTH CENTURY ROMANESQUE ART 97
romantic flavour and a mysticism of an individual kind soon
began to appear (Plate 48), which though they even tended to
emphasize the transcendental character of medieval style, also
I
Plate I. Sepulchral bust from Palmyra
Second century
[P-9]
^>v
fA>.xA.
.- V 1-1
O
O
fu
Cis
Plate 4. Mummy with painted mask,
from Egypt
Second century [p- ^J
Plate 5. Gilded glasses from the Roman Catacombs
Fourth century
[PP- 4, 5]
Plate 6. Ivory panel with the apotheosis of
an Emperor
Late fourth century [p. 13]
Plate 7. Two panels of an ivory casket with scenes from the Passion
Early fifth century
[p. 21]
Plate S. Ivory leaf of a diptych, with
figure of an archangel
Sixth century [p. 23]
Plate 9. Ivory panel with the Adoration of the Magi
and the Nativity
Sixth century
[P- 27]
B
o
o
3
W
-i^
fll--^^
Plate II. Silver bowl with figure of a Saint, found in Cyprus
About A.D. 650
[P- 25]
#^*5?
a)
Pi
Plate 13. Leaf of a Greek Gospel-book (Add. MS. 51 11)
Seventh century
[p. 26]
Plate 14. Silk panel with two horsemen, found in Egypt
Sixth to seventh century
[P- 32]
Plate 15. Coptic tombstone
Seventh century [p. 32]
t'.f
1:
^ '^:
"c-i'^^fFSj*-:^
S-J'Ma
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jj^ji^""
Plate i8. Portrait of St. Matthew from a Carolingian Gospel-book
rU. . - ,
,
MS. 2788)
(Harley
y^^^lhJ'l^^^'^'^'^ Ninth century [P- 46]
-j^m lMW*^^<! m^
; i^"^
* *./<
4^
r.4i^..1R
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P/^re 23. Leaf of an ivory diptych with scenes from the hfe of Christ
Carolingian, tenth century [p. 53]
Plate 24. Ivory panel with the Miracle at Cana
Carolingian, ninth century
[P- 44]
Plate 25. Rock-crystal engraved with the Story of Susanna and the two Elders
(The Crystal of Lothar)
CaroUngian, ninth century
[pp. 41, 49]
)'
f 'vm,,' ^j
In
*A. i- ^---,a
P/flfe 26. Ivor)' panel with the Raising of the Widow's Son
Ottoman, about a.d. 970
'Plate 27. The Annunciation, from a German Gospel-book (Harley MS. 2821)
Ottonian, early eleventh century
[P-7i]
Plate 28. Portrait of St. Luke, from an English Gospel-book (Add. MS. 34890)
Early eleventh century
[p. 62]
Ermonoirffuiirni-iiitLurt^ rsTucrbu lUiufAdaiidim tiicnm(oco<ltnmii.i0tifr ^
^
.
; ,
^/d/e 29A. Illustration of Psalm civ, from an English Psalter (Harley MS. 603)
About A.D. 1000 [p- 44]
ktini; uutnci:
(
in I4tme injerti]
M
Plate 29B. St. Pachomius receiving the Easter tables, from an English
manuscript (Cotton MS. Cahgula A. XV)
Eleventh century [p. 65]
f^^
Plate 31. The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, from a manuscript of
Beautus' Commentary on the Apocalypse (Add. MS. 11695)
Spanish, about a.d. iioo [p. 76]
Plate 33. Ivory panel with the Nativity
Eyzantine, tenth century
[p. 56]
* i .s*^ w v rxerfr^^
/ -
y%s* e* r.jijrtxt.fJi
M^
P/flfe 35. The Manna and the Quails, from a Byzantine Psalter
(Add. MS. 40731)
Eleventh century
[p. 60]
'^
i'^%
.^^.^-
.^**
J>4
[p. 86]
Plate 39. Bronze cover of a censer
Lower Rhine or Meusc (?), late twelfth century
[P- 87]
Plate 40. Stone capital with the Miraculous Draught of Fishes, from
Lewes Priory
English, twelfth century
[P- 85]
Plate 41 A. Ivory chessmen from the Island of Lewis
Scandinavian or English, about A.D. 1200
Plate 41B. Fragment of ivory panel with male figure in fohate scroll
English, twelfth century
[P-93l
CREAM 1)3^ <^>^^^''
*Tnm Terra airtr nnr !ii.>r.ii\f ittfii-i.
vV-tniArr<T.itn-%f.Tnn .ib-y,R. fv^cvli
RTrt'.tr'fnpj^i.tflH.rtrq. vind* fltr
xw-t * riUiiC d'.f!' kA< -
%yExxvnS-
UKttm" inftrmwnw li .
<f iIljaHntfttr
P/fl/e 42. Illustration of the first chapter of Genesis, from a German Bible
(Harley MS. 2803)
Twelfth century [pp- 88, 95]
Plate 43 . The Crucifixion and the sacrifice of a calf,
^n
. J .
IcdtomfAie&mom iiiftanamr.
[P- 97]
DESCRIPTION OF THE PLATES
[Unless otherwise indicated, 'right' and 'left* mean the right and
left of the spectator.]
Pi. 4. Mummy
with Painted Mask, from Egypt
Mummy-case of a young man ('Artemidoros') with portrait-
bust painted on a wooden panel.
(b) The two Marys at the Sepulchre, with two sleeping soldiers
seated on either side of the monument; the doors of the tomb are
open, revealing part of the coffin.
in a manger, with the Star of Bethlehem above and the ox and ass
on either side; in front the incredulous midwife stretching out her
withered hand towards the Child.
Height: 8-5 in. Eastern Mediterranean ( ?Palestine). Sixth century.
Silver, partly gilt. Length: 21-7 in. Height: 11 in. Part of a large
treasure found on the Esquiline Hill, Rome. Late fourth century.
Department of British and Medieval Antiquities.
(b) Illustration of Gen. xix, 11. Lot (to the left) defends his house
against the Sodomites. 4-3 in. X 3-7 in.
8-5 in. X 6-1 in. Said to have belonged to one of the monasteries
on Mount Athos; originally, perhaps, from Asia Minor. Seventh
century.
Add. MS. 5111. f. II.
holding up a curtain.
19.9 in. X 14.7 in. School of Tours. Ninth century.
In the late sixteenth century the MS. belonged to the monastery Moutiers-GrandvaJ
near Basle.
Add. MS. 10546. f. 25b.
manger with the ox and the ass. Below, the Adoration of the Magi
with the Virgin seated on a chair to the left and the three Magi
DESCRIPTION OF THE PLATES IO5
Moses and Elias, while SS. Peter, James and John prostrate them-
selves before Him. Below, the Entry into Jerusalem Our Lord ;
right two men spreading their garments on the way, and in the
background men holding palm-branches.
Height: 6-4 in. School of Metz. Tenth century.
Department of British and Medieval Antiquities.
Catalogue of Ivory Carvings, No. 46b.
Carolingian
Above, to the left. Our Lord with three companions conversing
with the Virgin, while to the right two servants wait on three
guests feasting at a table. Below, Our Lord in conversation with
the master of the house, and two servants carrying vases of water;
in the foreground a row of six jars.
Illustration of Psalm
Pi. 29. (a) civ from an English
Psalter
Above, Our Lord accompanied by the angels. His 'ministers',
'walking upon the wings of the winds', which are represented as
human heads blowing upon the earth. To the right and left are
sun, moon and stars ('He appointeth the moon for the seasons;
the sun knoweth going down'). Below are shown the Lord's
his
which sing among the branches', and the 'birds' which 'make
their nests on the Cedars of Lebanon'. A ploughman symbohzes
man who 'goeth forth to liis work and to his labour', while three
men seated at a table and served by two attendants with wine and
oil represent the 'wine that maketh glad the heart of man' and the
'oil to make his face shine'. In front of this scene is the 'great and
wide sea'; 'Here go the ships; there is that Leviathan'. To the
right the 'young hons roar after their prey'. Above them the
'high hills which and the Psalmist
are a refuge for the wild goats',
raising his right hand towards the Lord and pointing to the
Creation with his left.
tions OF ANIMALS
In the centre an eagle grasping a serpent. To the right and left
almost symmetrical groups of eagles grasping hares.
Saint and four scenes from martyrdom. Above, to the left, the
his
Emperor Maximian seated on a throne and sending out messen-
gers to take St. Anthimus prisoner. To the right the messengers
on horseback fmding the saint in his retreat. Below, to the left,
the saint tortured on a wheel in the presence of the Emperor. To
the right the saint's last prayer and his execution.
and Aaron standing on either side (Num. xxi, 8). To the left Ehjah
visiting the Widow of Zarephath, who has been collecting sticks
(a symbol of the Cross; i Kings xvii, 8). Below, Joshua and Caleb
on a chair and with a horn in her left hand, while the right is
placed against her cheek; and a bishop, with mitre and chasuble,
sitting on a chair with a crozier in his left hand, his right raised in
benediction.
(As a recompense for the blemish of the fraud [i.e. the original
sin] a calf is given as a praise offering. That Christ is the calf this
tide-picture shows.)
DESCRIPTION OF THE PLATES II3
and David, with a quotation (Psalm ex, 4). Below, David with a
quotation (Psalm xxix, 31) and St. Luke, carrying his symbol,
with a quotation fi:om his Gospel (xv, 22f).
Height of miniature : 1 1 in. Written in the Abbey of FlorefFe on
the Meuse. About a.d. 1160.
Add. MS. 17738. f. 187.
St. Peter cutting off the ear of Malchus. Below, the Flagellation;
to the left Pilate, wearing a crown, is seated on a throne, the Devil,
in the shape of a black beast, whispering in his ear.
By Ernst Kitzinger
BLOOMINGTON