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The Viking Invasion. Rune stones: twig like letters of an early Germanic alphabetPicture stones: common design and theme:Heroic death in battleJourney of dead warriors to Valhalla. Scenes in horizontal registersSurrounded by band of symbolicribbon interlace.. Ship= dead warrior's passage to Valhalla..
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1. Carolingian Europe and Beyond.
3. Gripping Beasts Animal interlace with beasts that clutch each other
Small claw-like hands
Faceted cutting emphasizes flicker of light on densely carved surfaces
4. Art: East meets West Byzantine view of Art
787 Icons are reestablished
Icons are holy because they are made by supernatural powers
This is what makes them precious Charlemagne proclaims art to be: man made
Artists create visual fictions
Therefore art work is not supernatural
Images are precious only if material is valuable
Value of art and images is educational.
As Pope Gregory said, images are books for those who cant read.
5. Roman Basilica gets a facelift. Multi-storied narthex flanked by stair towers.
Because the church entrance faced west, these were called westwork
6. St. Gall: Plan
7. Saint Riquier
8. The Palace Chapel
9. Palace Chapel in Aachen or Aix-la-Chapelle Central plan church.
Added westwork with tall stair tower on each side.
Large walled forecourt where crowds could assemble.
Spiral stairs in twin towers led to a throne room on second level that opened onto the chapel rotunda, allowing the emperor to participate in Mass.
Relics were housed above the room on the 3rd level.
Core of chapel is an octagon.
Octagon rises to clerestory above gallery level.
Ambulatory aisle surrounds this central core to form a 16-sided outer wall.
Gallery opens on the central space through arched openings supported by 2 tiers of Corinthian columns.
Building has a clarity created by flat walls and geometric forms.
Powerful vertical visual pull.
Clear division of the structure into parts and vertical emphasis are both hallmarks the new style developed under Charlemagne.
10. San Vitale and the Palace Chapel
12. Page with Mark the Evangelist Godescalc Evangelistary 781 Lion is source of inspiration as well as iconographic symbol by which he is known.
Arms, hips and knees are modeled
Bench and lectern give hint of 3-D space despite flat background
Feet on platform
Round-shouldered posture
Classical spiraling-vine motif
But naturalistic touches are destroyed by impossible position of left knee
Stylized plants set scene out-of-door
Commissioned by Charlemagne and his wife perhaps to commemorate baptism of their sons in Rome
13. Books under Charlemagne and his son, Louis the Pious St. Matthew :Coronation Gospels St. Matthew Ebbo Gospels
14. Playing charades in print: The drawings literally interprets
individual words.
There is a close association
between text
and illustration in Carolingian art.
15. Lindau Gospel cover 870-880 Early tradition of youthful Jesus
Heroic, weightless
Open-eyed
No pain
Nearly nude
Doesnt hang from cross
Some modeling and 3-D form, but rigid
Stylized drapery
Triumphant over death
Welcomes believers into the faith
16. Henry the Fowler (919-936) a Saxon, founded the Ottonian dynasty. After Henry, who defeated the Vikings, there were:
Otto I 936-973 gained control of Italymarried a Langobard queen and crowned emperor by Pope in 962. All successors dominated the papacy and appointments to other Church offices that this union of Germany and Italy under a German ruler became known as the Holy Roman Empire.
Otto II 973-83
Otto III regency 983-96 ruled 996-1002
All sought to replicate the splendors of the Christian architecture of imperial Rome. Incorporated Carolingian as well as their own ideas.
17. Convent of Saint Cyriakus in Germany had as its abbess Geros, the provincial military governor, widowed daughter-in-law Basilica with westworks plan
Choir and apse seen here replaced westwork in the late 12th century.
Towers and westwork dominated the east and west ends of the church, as in St. Riquier
Windows, wall and blind arcades break-up the severity of the exterior
Interior has three levels, including a clerestory
There is an alternation of columns and rectangular piers that creates a rhythmic effect
Also vertical shifts in visual rhythm with 2 arches on nave level surmounted by 6 arches on gallery level, surmounted in turn by 3 windows in clerestory
This aesthetic of rhythmic alternation of heavy and light supports, balance of rectangular and round forms and combination of horizontal and vertical movement inspires church architecture for years to come.
18. Interior of Saint Cyriakus Three stories
Alternating rhythms of light columns with heavy rectangular piers
Contrast of round and rectangular
Vertical shifts in visual rhythm with 2:6:3 (arches and clerestory)
19. Hildensheims Church St. Micaels at Hildensheim
Double transept plan
Tower groupings a westwork
Massive walls
Two apses
Enter from side
Ceilings are flat
Piers alternate with pairs of columns in what is called alternate- support system producing rhythmic effect of light and heavy support
Bronze doors 1015
16 feet tall
Decorated with relief panels from old and new testament
Monumentality matched by intellectual content of iconography
20. Saint Michaels, Hildesheim, Germany, 10011031.
21. Plan and cut-away view of St.Michaels.
22. Gero Crucifix Commissioned by the Archbishop Gero of Cologne
and presented to his cathedral about 970
Figure of Jesus is more than 6 feet tall
Focus is on Jesus suffering, a tortured martyr
Meant to inspire pity and awe
Straight linear aspect of drapery in contrast to sagging torso
and limp bloodied hands
Image of distilled anguish
23. Books
24. In Otto III Enthroned, he too is near-divine.
He is shown enthroned in heaven, surrounded by a mandorla and symbols representing the evangelists.
The Hand Of God descends from above to place a crown on his head.
Ottos arms are extended in an all-embracing gesture, and he holds the Orb of the World surmounted by a cross in his right hand.
His throne, in a symbol of worldly domination, sits of Tellus, the personification of earth.
The banner the evangelists hold may be a symbol dividing body below from soul above.
On each side of Otto III is an emperor bowing his crowned head toward him.
Bannered lances (they hold) may allude to the Ottonians most precious relic, the Holy Lance (believed to be the one a Roman soldier used to pierce Jesus side.)
Below, the soldiers and bishops symbolize the union of church and state.
25. Otto III
26. Lectionary of Henry II 1002-1014Annunciation to the Shepherds