1 / 57

Barbarian to Carolingian Art

Barbarian to Carolingian Art. End of the Classical Era. The collapse of the economy of the West meant that skilled workers departed for the East.

Télécharger la présentation

Barbarian to Carolingian Art

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Barbarian to Carolingian Art

  2. End of the Classical Era • The collapse of the economy of the West meant that skilled workers departed for the East. • Even had the new barbarian rulers an interest in preserving city life, there were no longer the technical skills to do so. The West simply ran down through neglect.

  3. End of the Classical Era • The Barbarians who came to settle in what had been the Western Roman Empire brought their own artistic traditions with them.

  4. Dark Ages? • The dark ages were not so dark as many imagine them. • Classical culture lived on and classical art was much valued, even by Rome’s barbarian conquerors. • However, trade and the organization needed to maintain a civilized, urban, culture collapsed.

  5. Dark Ages? • There was no sudden disappearance of Classical forms – just a fading out of the Classical World as the barbarians took over.

  6. Barbarians – Warrior’s Boar Helmet

  7. Barbarians – Warriors With Boar Helmets

  8. Barbarians & the So-Called Dark Ages • Barbarian art differed from Classical art in many ways. • First and foremost, it reflected pagan, and often animist traditions. • Nature deities replaced man and God as the measure of all things.

  9. Barbarians & the So-Called Dark Ages • Abstract and organic shapes were merged in highly original designs. • Art objects tended to be portable, since the Germanic tribes were mobile. Tara Brooch (Celtic)

  10. Celtic/Germanic Art • Most such art existed in small, portable, forms. • Jewelry • Textiles • Weaponry Purse Cover from the Sutton Hoo Treasure

  11. Celtic/Germanic Art

  12. Celtic/Germanic Art - Viking Jewelery

  13. Celtic/Germanic Art • Naturally textiles and wood have mostly been lost. • Some Norse artifacts, which are culturally similar, but from a later period, do survive. Wooden Prow of a Viking Longship

  14. Celtic/Germanic Art • Long lasting work in metal does survive and provides evidence of a rich artistic tradition. Gundestrup Cauldron – beaten our of 10 kg. Of silver

  15. Celtic/Germanic Art • Much surviving craftsmanship consists of weaponry.

  16. Celtic/Germanic Art

  17. Celtic/Germanic Art – Saxon Literature -- Beowulf • In a word where literacy was limited to the clergy alone, an oral tradition was vital. • Poet-singers, called troubadours, trouveres or minnesanger, told or sang stories and perpetuated legends. • One such legend was Beowulf.

  18. Celtic/Germanic Art; Anglo – Saxon Literature --Beowulf 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8

  19. Christianity • Between the 5th and 9th centuries a fusion of the Classical and Germanic worlds would take place. • The catalyst for this change was the Roman Catholic Church.

  20. Christianity • The advance of Christianity in the Barbarian West is the most significant development of the early Middle Ages. • Missionaries and monks from Ireland in the North-West and from Rome eventually Christianized all of Western Europe. • Their monopoly of literacy and learning made them invaluable to Kings and powerful rulers.

  21. Monasticism • As towns fell into disrepair, small, often remote, monastic communities preserved what they valued of the classical world, including literacy and some technology. • The chief strength of the Church was that it preserved learning in the West. Kings and chiefs needed the skills that only the clergy possessed

  22. Monasticism • From their fortress-like communities, monks laboriously copied manuscripts, worked and prayed.

  23. Christian Influence • The fusion of Christian and Celtic-Germanic styles is seen in Irish and Scottish stone crosses. Monasterboice Cross Moone Cross

  24. Early Medieval Illumination • The Christian influence is also particularly apparent in manuscript illuminations, the work of Irish monks. Illumination of a page from the Book of Kells

  25. Early Medieval Illumination Gospel of Luke

  26. Early Medieval Illumination Halberstadt Gospels

  27. Early Medieval Illumination Lindisfarne Gospels

  28. Early Medieval Illumination Book of Kells Lindisfarne Gospels

  29. Early Medieval Illumination • In this early art, man becomes a stylized and unrealistic image.

  30. The Carolingian Renaissance • The so-called Carolingian Renaissance was short-lived. • Art and learning were encouraged and the great king nearly restored order to Europe. • Unfortunately his successors were less capable and outside invasions destroyed his empire’s unity.

  31. The Carolingian Renaissance Light Green areas inherited by Charlemagne Dark Green areas added by the time of his death

  32. The Carolingian Renaissance Charlemagne Coin

  33. The Carolingian Renaissance The Supposed Sword of Charlemagne

  34. Carolingian Texts Codex Aureus

  35. Carolingian Texts St. Gall Gospel Back Cover

  36. The Carolingian Renaissance • Charlemagne encouraged learning and literacy. • Monks copied and created illuminated works of great beauty, such as Ebbo’s Gospel Book. St. Mathew’s Gospel

  37. Carolingian Texts Charlemagne’s Gospel of St. Mark

  38. The Carolingian Renaissance • An important development in Carolingian scriptoria was the invention of a new kind of writing – Carolingian miniscule – which used both upper and lower case letters.

  39. The Carolingian Renaissance From the Stuttgart Psalter

  40. The Carolingian Renaissance • Wonderful work in metal and crystal adorned abbeys and palaces.

  41. The Carolingian RenaissanceReliquaries Supposed True Cross Reliquary

  42. The Carolingian RenaissanceReliquaries

  43. The Carolingian Renaissance Ivory Dyptich

  44. The Carolingian RenaissancePortable Art A Carolingian Purse

  45. The Carolingian Renaissance • Few mosaics survive, but they were important and likely reflect links to the Byzantine Empire Ceiling of Charlemagne’s Palatine Chapel, Aachen

  46. The Carolingian RenaissanceFresco St. Rabanus

  47. The Carolingian Renaissance • In politics, Charlemagne linked the Mediterranean and Atlantic worlds. • They were now also linked politically. • Classical realism reappear, somewhat. • It is also linked with Byzantine symbolism and Germanic decoration.

  48. End of the Carolingian Renaissance • Charlemagne’s death left the empire in weaker hands. • By the treaty of Verdun, the Frankish Empire was divided among his grandsons.

  49. End of the Carolingian Renaissance • Outsiders also threatened the empire. • From the North came the Vikings. • From the East came the Magyars. • From the South came the Moslems

  50. Ottonian Art • The advances of the Carolingian Renaissance were not completely lost, however. • Otto I established a line of Saxon kings that gained control over most of Italy and present-day Germany

More Related