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EARLY MEDIEVAL ART IN THE WEST

EARLY MEDIEVAL ART IN THE WEST . 500-1000 CE. animal style : generic term for the characteristic ornamentation of artifacts worn/carried by nomadic peoples c odex: manuscript books which were decorated, improvements of scrolls, made of vellum or sheep/goat hide

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EARLY MEDIEVAL ART IN THE WEST

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  1. EARLY MEDIEVAL ART IN THE WEST 500-1000 CE

  2. animal style: generic term for the characteristic ornamentation of artifacts worn/carried by nomadic peoples • codex: manuscript books which were decorated, improvements of scrolls, made of vellum or sheep/goat hide • cloisonné: enamelwork in which colored areas are separated by thin bands of metal (gold, bronze, etc.) • horror vacui: a type of artwork in which the entire surface is filled with objects, people, designs, and ornaments in a crowded way (Latin: fear of empty spaces) • cloister: a rectangular open-air monastery courtyard with a covered arcade surrounding it • psalter: a book containing the Psalms, or sacred song poems, of the Bible • westwork: monumentalentrance to a Carolingian church in which two towers flank a lower central entrance. • scriptorium: place in a monastery where monks wrote manuscripts Vocabulary

  3. Age of Mass Migration  portable works • “Dark Ages” • Knowledge of the Romans lost to history or beyond capabilities of these migratory people. • What we do know of early Medieval society: • The Church was the only major institution to survive in the Roman Empire in the West • Monasteries: schools of the time, self-sufficient, sources of text • Feudalism • Life threatened by epidemic famine and disease • Belief in the supernatural & magic • Four different civilizations reveal characteristics of this period. Historical Background

  4. Early Medieval Sites in Europe

  5. animal style • The Scythians (Persian-speaking nomadic group) passed on to the Germanic tribe, even medieval art in general, the familiar animal ornamentation seen in this period. Pectoral with scenes from Scythian life (Greek craft done for the Scythians), c. fourth century BC, Gold, diameter 12”, weight 2.5 lbs. Historical Museum, Kiev. The Animal Style: Scythian Antecedents

  6. Purse Cover from Sutton Hoo Ship Burial, 600-650, gold, garnet, enamels, British Museum, London Saxon Art

  7. 6th-8th centuries • British Isles (Hibernia = Ireland) • Main artistic expression is illuminated manuscripts • Much of the art uses interlace patterns, borders are in animal style • Artists had good use of color and form Ornamental page from the Book of Lindisfarne, from Northumberland, England, late seventh century. Illumination, approx. 13” x 10”. British Museum, London. High Cross of Muiredach, Monasterboice, County Louth, Ireland, 923. Approx. 16’ high. Hiberno-Saxon Art

  8. Chi-rho-iota (XPI) page, folio 34 recto of the Book of Kells, probably from Iona, Scotland, late eighth or early ninth century. Tempera on vellum, 1’ 1” X 9 1/2”. Trinity College Library, Dublin.

  9. 8th-11th Centuries • Scandinavia • Inspired by prehistoric models that emphasized animals and spirals in elaborate interlacing patterns • Works are in animal style with horror vacui Wood-carved ornament (porch of stave church), Urnes, Norway, eleventh century. Animal-head post from the Oseberg ship burial, c. 825. Woood, approx. 5” high. Vikingskipshuset Museum, Oslo. Viking Art

  10. 8th-9th Centuries • France, Germany • Art of Charlemagne and his times • First revival of classical art • Churches characterized by westworks, often had monasteries • Continuation of manuscript painting Cover of the Psalter of Charles the Bald, c. 865. Ivory panel with scenes from Psalms 51 and 57 set in silver-gilt frame with filigree work and precious stones. St. Matthew, from the Coronation Gospels (the Gospel Book of Charlemagne), c. 800-810. Approx. 9”x6.75”. Kunsthistoriches Museum, Vienna. St. Matthew, from the Ebbo Gospels, Hautvilliers (near Reims), France, c. 816-835). Approx. 10”x8”. BibliothèqueNationale, Paris. Psalm 150, from the Utrecht psalter, from Hautvilliers, France, c. 830. 4.75”x9.5”. University Library, Utrecht, Netherlands. Carolingian Art

  11. Torhalle (gatehouse) Lorsch, Germany, c. 800. Interior of the Palatine Chapel of Charlemagne. Schematic plan for a monastery at St. Gall, Switzerland, c. 819.

  12. 10th-early 11th Centuries • Germany • Influenced by Roman/Early Christian past, but continues Carolingian imperial imagery • Large stone churches prevalent, bronze doors • Architectural theme: interior arches and windows are not aligned, interior walls are unadorned and flat. Adam and Eve Reproached by the Lord, from the bronze doors commissioned by BishipBernward for St. Michael’s, 1015. Approx. 23” x 43”. Ottonian Art Doors of Bishop Bernward, made for the Abbey Church of Saint Michael, Hildesheim, Germany. 1015. Bronze, height 16’6 (5m). Abbey Church of St. Michel (restored ), Hildesheim, Germany, c.1001-1031.

  13. The Anunication to the Shepherds, from the Lectionary of Henry II, 1002-1014. Approx. 17” x 13”. Bayerische, Staatsbibliothek, Munich. Otto III Enthroned Receiving the Homage of Four Parts of the Empire (with nobility and clergy), from the Gospel Book of Otto III, 997-1000. Approx. 14” x 10”. BayerischeStaatsbibliothek, Munich.

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