Ada LD 2.1
Ada LD 2.1
Ada LD 2.1
Medieval Art
• The medieval art of the Western world covers a vast scope of time and place, over 1000
years of art in Europe, and at times the Middle East and North Africa. It includes major
art movements and periods, national and regional art, genres, revivals, the artists'
crafts, and the artists themselves.
• Art historians attempt to classify medieval art into major periods and styles, often with
some difficulty. A generally accepted scheme includes the later phases of Early
Christian art, Migration Period art, Byzantine art, Insular art, Pre-
Romanesque, Romanesque art, and Gothic art, as well as many other periods within
these central styles. In addition each region, mostly during the period in the process of
becoming nations or cultures, had its own distinct artistic style, such as Anglo-Saxon
art or Viking art.
• Medieval art was produced in many media, and works survive in large numbers
in sculpture, illuminated manuscripts, stained glass, metalwork and mosaics, all of
which have had a higher survival rate than other media such as fresco wall-paintings,
work in precious metals or textiles, including tapestry. Especially in the early part of the
period, works in the so-called "minor arts" or decorative arts, such as metalwork, ivory
carving, enamel and embroidery using precious metals, were probably more highly
valued than paintings or monumental sculpture.[1]
Byzantine monumental Church The jewelled cover of the Codex
mosaics are one of the great Aureus of St. Emmeram, c. 870, a
achievements of medieval art. These Carolingian Gospel book.
are from Monreale in Sicily from the
late 12th century.
Byzantine Art
The first golden age of the empire, the Early Byzantine period,
extends from the founding of the new capital into the 700s.
Christianity replaced the gods of antiquity as the official religion
of the culturally and religiously diverse state in the late 300s
(2006.569). The practice of Christian monasticism developed in
the fourth century, and continued to be an important part of
the Byzantine faith, spreading from Egypt to all parts of the
empire.
Emperor Justinian Mosaic, San Vitale,
Ravenna, c. 546-56
MIDDLE BYZANTINE (C. 850–1204)
• The Middle Byzantine period followed a period of crisis for the arts
called the Iconoclastic Controversy, when the use of religious images
was hotly contested. Iconoclasts (those who worried that the use of
images was idolatrous), destroyed images, leaving few surviving images
from the Early Byzantine period. Fortunately for art history, those in
favor of images won the fight and hundreds of years of Byzantine artistic
production followed.
• While the political boundaries of Late Byzantium under the Palaiologan emperors were
drastically reduced from the expansive lands of the Early and Middle Byzantine periods,
Byzantine religious influence still extended far beyond its borders (2006.100). The focus of
Byzantine power was now centered in Constantinople, and extended westward to northern
and central Greece, and south into the Peloponnesos. In the east, the Byzantine Empire of
Trebizond, which had flourished during the Latin Occupation, continued to exist as an
independently ruled Byzantine territory in competition with the Palaiologan-ruled empire
with its capital at Constantinople. The last Byzantine lands would be conquered by
the Ottoman Turks in the mid-fifteenth century, with Constantinople taken in 1453, and
Mistra and Trebizond in 1460. These Islamic conquests brought an end to an empire that
endured more than 1,100 years after its first founding. Long after its fall, Byzantium set a
standard for luxury, beauty, and learning that inspired the Latin West and the Islamic East
Anastasis (Harrowing of Hell), c. 1310-20, fresco,
Church of the Holy Savior of Chora/Kariye Museum,
Istanbul
Icon of St. George ('The Black George'),
c. 1400-1450, tempera on panel, 77.4 x 57
cm (The British Museum)
Romanesque Art
• Gothic art was a style of medieval art that developed in Northern France out of
Romanesque art in the 12th century AD, led by the concurrent development of
Gothic architecture.
• It spread to all of Western Europe, and much of Southern and Central Europe,
never quite effacing more classical styles in Italy.
• In the late 14th century, the sophisticated court style of International Gothic
developed, which continued to evolve until the late 15th century.
• In many areas, especially Germany, Late Gothic art continued well into the 16th
century, before being subsumed into Renaissance art.
•
• Primary media in the Gothic period included sculpture, panel painting, stained
glass, fresco and illuminated manuscripts.
• The earliest Gothic art was monumental
sculpture, on the walls of Cathedrals and
abbeys.
• With the growth of cities, trade guilds were formed and artists were
often required to be members of a painters' guild—as a result,
because of better record keeping, more artists are known to us by
name in this period than any previous; some artists were even so
bold as to sign their names.
• The Gothic period coincided with a great resurgence in Marian
devotion, in which the visual arts played a major part.
• Artists like Giotto, Fra Angelico and Pietro Lorenzetti in Italy, and
Early Netherlandish painting, brought realism and a more natural
humanity to art.
• Painting did not appear until about 1200, nearly 50 years after the
origins of Gothic architecture and sculpture.
• Frescoes continued to be used as the main pictorial narrative craft on church walls
in southern Europe as a continuation of early Christian and Romanesque
traditions.
• Among the finest examples are those of the Elmelunde Master from the Danish
island of Møn who decorated the churches of Fanefjord, Keldby and Elmelunde.
• Albertus Pictor is arguably the most well-known fresco artist from the period
working in Sweden.
• The earliest full manuscripts date to the middle of the 13th century. Many such
illuminated manuscripts were royal bibles, although psalters also included
illustrations.
• During the late 13th century, scribes began to create prayer books for the laity, often
known as books of hours due to their use at prescribed times of the day.
• Among the most well-known creators of these is Jean Pucelle, whose Hours of
Jeanne d'Evreux was commissioned by King Charles IV as a gift for his queen,
Jeanne d'Évreux.
Hours of Jeanne d'Evreux.
• From the middle of the 14th century, block books with both text and images cut as
woodcut seem to have been affordable by parish priests.
• By the end of the century, printed books with illustrations, still mostly on religious
subjects, were rapidly becoming accessible to the prosperous middle class, as
were engravings of fairly high-quality by printmakers like Israhel van Meckenem
and Master E. S..
• In the 15th century, the introduction of cheap prints, mostly in woodcut, made it
possible even for peasants to have devotional images at home. These images, tiny
at the bottom of the market, often crudely coloured, were sold in thousands but are
now extremely rare, most having been pasted to walls.
Panel Painting:
• Painting with oil on canvas did not become popular until the 15th and 16th centuries
and was a hallmark of Renaissance art.
• Painters like Robert Campin and Jan van Eyck, made use of the technique of oil
painting to create minutely detailed works, correct in perspective, where apparent
realism was combined with richly complex symbolism arising precisely from the
realistic detail they could now include, even in small works.
• The Mérode Altarpiece (1420s) of Robert Campin, and the Washington Van Eyck
Annunciation or Madonna of Chancellor Rolin (both 1430s, by Jan van Eyck) are
examples.
• For the wealthy, small panel paintings, even polyptychs in oil painting were
becoming increasingly popular, often showing donor portraits alongside, though
often much smaller than, the Virgin or saints depicted. These were usually
displayed in the home.
The Mérode Altarpiece of Robert
Campin.
• Small carvings, for a mainly lay and often female market, became a
considerable industry in Paris and some other centres.
• Their secular equivalent, the livery badge, were signs of feudal and political loyalty
or alliance that came to be regarded as a social menace in England.