16 - EUROPE AFTER THE FALL OF ROME -EARLY MEDIEVAL ART - IN THE WEST

Vocabulary: cloisonné, cloister, gallery, monastery, interlace, repouseé, scriptorium(ia), westwork,

c.500-1500, from fall of Rome to Renaissance

-Early Medieval= c. 500 - 1000

-last Roman emperor, d. 476 CE= Flavius Romulus Augustus

-coined by humanists as age of darkness= Dark Ages

-considered crude, "uncultured" period

-Roman authority replaced by strong local leaders

-Germanic Franks, Goths, Saxons, Norse, Celts

-most EMA is portable--time of unrest, nomads, conflicts

-local arts and craftsmen

-geometric designs & animal motifs, abstractions

-manuscript illumination becomes important art form

-great use to missionaries, estab. authority of Church

-What scripture is to the educated, images are to the ignorant

-Pope Gregory the Great, papacy 590-604

-the Western Church took position that images are precious if material is precious

Medieval Fusion - Migrational Art
-Fuses Christianity + Greco-Roman + non-Roman peoples north of Alps

-Christianity spread north and northern art styles migrated south

-Celtic-Germanic Art

-combines abstract and organic shapes
-beautiful, geometric, interlacing patterns
-Animal Style - Celtic, Germanic Style
-SEE: Purse Cover, Sutton Hoo ship burial, FIG 16-2, 625 CE

-#16-3 Animal head post from Oseberg ship burial, c.825

-animal form + interlace

-Hiberno-Saxon Manuscripts

-St. Patrick estab church in Ireland, monastery
-Illumination, interlace, word of God=sacred, copied by monks-scriptoria
-SEE: Lindisfarne Gospels, FIG 16-6 c. 700

-SEE: Chi Rho page from Book of Kells, c. 800


-CAROLINGIAN ART
-c.750-900 CE, principally modern Germany & Austria

-Rome rises again, Pope Leo III crowned Charlemagne Christmas Day, 800 CE

-1st Holy Roman Emperor, Imperial rule once again

-union of Germany + Italy
-Charlemagne's(742-814) influence

-Roman cultural influences, literature, arts, traditions

-on his official seal= renovatio Romani imperii
-United Celtic/Germanic traditions with Mediterranean traditions
-Painting
-scriptoria workshops produced authoritative copies of key religious texts

-scribes & scholars developed uniform Latin script letters

-books played central role in propagating learning and faith

-St. Matthew from Charlemagne's Gospel Book, c.800, FIG 16-12

-gold ink, purple vellum

-Compare to #16-13, St. Matthew from Gospel Book of Archbishop Ebbo, c.825

-SEE #16-15, Lindau Gospels cover, c.870

-Architecture
-Latin Cross churches, chapels, tombs
-Exteriors= weighty, plain, massive
-Interiors= polychromatic, decorative, use of marble
-Palace Chapel of Charlemagne at Aachen, 792-805, FIG 16 & 17
-Odo of Metz=architect
-Classical revival--based somewhat on San Vitale at Ravenna

-#19, Torhalle, Gatehouse, Lorsch, Germany, c.850

-#20, Plan of Monastery at Saint Gall, Switzerland, c. 820

-Sculpture
-Relegated to just a few objects--SEE: Balustrade relief, c.725

-OTTONIAN ART
-Otto I re-established German emperors as heads of the Holy Roman Empire
-Re-established imperial ambitions of Charlemagne

-
-Architecture
-Latin cross basilica plan prevailed--grew in size and scale

-architects sought to duplicate splendors of Christian architecture of imperial Rome
-Addition of towers, spires, turrets, westworks
-Westwork= monumental entrance structure SEE: St. Pantaleon, Cologne, #16-22
-SEE: St. Michael's--Hildesheim Cathedral, c.1000, FIG #22 & 23
-2 identical transepts
-rigid symmetry

-Sculpture
-Most examples from Germany

-Bishop Bernward bronze doors, St. Michael's, Hildesheim, 1015, FIG #24

-LEFT= Book of Genesis RIGHT= Life of Christ
-SEE: Gero Crucifix, Cologne Cathedral, c. 970, #27
-new lifesize image of Christ suffering
-powerful emotional content
-physical and emotional torment

-Painting
Art of the Book

-Manuscript illumination combined Carolingian and Byzantine elements
-variety and scope, new intensity
-SEE #28, Annunciation to the Shepherds, Lectionary of Henry II, c.1000\

-tempera on vellum

-FIG #29, Otto III Enthroned, Gospel Book of Otto III, c. 1000

-tempera on vellum