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BYZANTIUM. GARDINER CHAPTER 12-3 PP. 330-338. SAINT MARK’S – VENICE. Interior of Saint Mark’s, Venice, Italy, begun 1063 The Byzantine East was not the only place for the revival of church building on a grand scale 751 Ravenna and N. Italy is taken from the Byzantines by the Lombards
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BYZANTIUM GARDINER CHAPTER 12-3 PP. 330-338
SAINT MARK’S –VENICE • Interior of Saint Mark’s, Venice, Italy, begun 1063 • The Byzantine East was not the only place for the revival of church building on a grand scale • 751 Ravenna and N. Italy is taken from the Byzantines by the Lombards • Venice, 80 miles north of Ravenna, becomes an independent power -> ruled by the DOGES (dukes) -> becomes a center of seaborne commerce and a link between Byzantium and the West • Saint Mark’s has a central dome over the crossing and four other domes over the four equal arms of the Greek cross • 40,000 square feet of dazzling mosaics covering the walls and vaults
NORMAN SICILY • Pantokrator, Theotokos and Child, angels, and saints, apse mosaic in the cathedral at Monreale (Sicily), Italy, ca. 1180-1190 • Normans = northern French descendants of the Vikings • Normans drive the Arabs from Sicily -> est. strong kingdom -> in Sicily there is an interplay of Western Christian, Byzantine, and Islamic cultures • In centrally planned Byzantine churches the image of the Pantokrator appears in the main dome -> but the Monreale cathedral is a longitudinal basilica and the semidome of the apse is its only vault • It is estimated that the mosaics of the Monreale cathedral are made up of 100 million glass and stone tesserae
HARBAVILLE TRIPTYCH • Christ enthroned with saints, ca. 950, ivory, central panel 9”x5” • TRIPTYCH = 3 panels • This is a portable shrine with hinged wings used for private devotion • On the two wings are four pairs of full length figures and two pairs of medallions depicting saints • Central panel shows John the Baptist the Theotokos praying on behalf of the viewer to the enthroned savior -> below are 5 apostles • Less formality and solemnity -> softer. More fluid technique -> looser stances, ¾ views of many of the heads • This more natural, classical spirit is characteristic of the Middle Byzantine period
NEREZI • Lamentation over the dead Christ, wall painting, Saint Pantaleimon, Nerezi, Macedonia, 1164 • Working in the Balkans in an alternate Byzantine mode, this painter staged the emotional scene of the Lamentation in a hilly landscape below a blue sky • An image of passionate grief • Attitudes, expressions, and gestures of quite human bereavement • Contrast this w/ the abstract golden world of the mosaics in church walls elsewhere in the Byzantine Empire -> alternative to the frontal, flatter figures of Ravenna
PARIS PSALTER • David composing the Psalms, folio 1 verso of the Paris Psalter, ca. 950-970, tempera on vellum • Another example of the classical revival style • Biblical scene rendered w/inspiration from the Hellenistic naturalism of the ore-Christian world • Rocky landscape w/town in background -> allegorical figures not from the bible accompany the Old Testament harpist • Byzantine artists kept the classical style alive in the Middle Ages
VLADIMIR VIRGIN • Virgin (Theotokos) and Child, icon, late 11th to 12th centuries, tempera on wood • Middle Byzantine art sees the return to prominence of the icon • The renowned Vladimir Virgin is a masterpiece of icon painting • Stylized abstraction -> Virgin’s long, straight nose and small mouth -> golden rays of the infant’s drapery -> unbroken contour that encloses the two figures -> flat silhouette against the golden ground • Artist depicts Mary as the Virgin of Compassion -> presses her cheek against her son’s as she contemplates his future • Icons were placed before or above altars in churches or private chapels • Taken from Kiev in Ukraine to Vladimir in Russia then to Moscow to protect the city from Mongols -> it was seen as a wonder working image
LATE BYZANTINE ART • Major events in Byzantine history in the 11th and 12th centuries • Seljuk Turks conquer most of Anatolia • Byzantine Orthodox Church makes final break with the Church of Rome • Crusades bring the Latins (peoples of the West) into Byzantine lands on their way to fight the Saracens/Muslims in the Holy Land • 1203 and 1204 the Crusaders motivated by envy, greed, religious fanaticism and ethnic enmity attack Constantinople and sack it • Latins set up kingdoms within Byzantium -> 1261 Byzantines retake Constantinople -> but the empire is a mere fragment -> it disintegrates over the next 2 centuries -> 1453 the Ottoman Turks conquer Constantinople and end Byzantium forever
LATE BYZANTINE ART, 1261-1453 • Late Byzantine period = 14th and 15th centuries • Four characteristic examples show the range and quality of painting during the Late Byzantine period 1. Christ in Chora – apse fresco 2. Ohrid Icons – Christ as Savior of Souls 3. Ohrid Icons – The Annunciation 4. Icon paintings of Andrei Rublyev
LATE BYZANTINE PAINTING – CHRIST IN CHORA • Anastasis, apse fresco in the parekklesion of the Church of Christ in Chora, Constantinople, Turkey, ca. 1310-1320 • In this Late Byzantine funerary chapel, Christ, a white apparition surrounded by a luminous mandorla - > raises Adam and Eve from tombs -> on the left are John the Baptist, and King’s David and Solomon -> on the right are various martyr saints • Action is swift and smooth -> figures float in a spiritual atmosphere, spaceless and without material mass or shadow casting volume
LATE BYZANTINE PAINTING – OHRID ICONS • Christ as Savior of Souls, icon from Saint Clement, Ohrid, Macedonia, early 14th century • ICONOSTASIS = a high screen/partition with doors and tiers of icons that separates the sanctuary from the main body of a Byzantine church • This icon is notable for the lavish use of finely etched silver foil -> the Savior holds a bejeweled Bible in his left hand and blesses the faithful w/his right hand • This icon typifies Byzantine eclecticism -> juxtaposition of the fully modeled head and neck in the Greco-Roman heritage and the schematic, linear folds of the garment
LATE BYZANTINE PAINTING – OHRID ICONS • Annunciation, reverse of a two-sided icon from Saint Clement, Ohrid, Macedonia, early 14th century, tempera and linen on wood • Late Byzantine icons often painted on two sides -> intended to be carried in processions • In this scene the angel Gabriel announces to Mary that she is to be the Mother of God • Gestures and attitudes are conventional -> highly simplified architectural props -> sturdy three dimensional figures -> but otherworldly sky of a sacred space • Another example of eclecticism
ANDREI RUBLYEV • In Russia icon painting flourishes long after the collapse of the Byzantine Empire in 1453 • Russian painting had strong patterns, firm lines, and intense contrasting colors -> better to see them in the candlelight and clouds of incense in church interiors • The master of Russia icon painting is ANDREI RUBLYEV • Three angels(Old Testament Trinity), ca. 1410, tempera on wood, Moscow -> exceptionally large icon • Saturation, brilliance, and purity of the color harmonies are the hallmark of Rublyev’s style