Chapter 11: Romanesque 

Key Notes

  • Time Period: 1050–1150, some objects date as early as 1000 and late as 1200

  • Culture, beliefs, and physical settings

    • Romanesque art is a part of the medieval artistic tradition.

    • In the Romanesque period, royal courts emphasized the study of theology, music, and writing.

    • Romanesque art avoids naturalism and emphasizes stylistic variety. Text is often incorporated into artwork from this period.

  • Cultural interactions

    • There is an active exchange of artistic ideas throughout the Middle Ages.

    • There is a great influence of Roman, Early Medieval, and Islamic art on Romanesque art.

  • Audience, functions and patron

    • Works of art were often displayed in religious or court settings.

    • Existing architecture is mostly religious.

  • Theories and Interpretations

    • The study of art history is shaped by changing analyses based on scholarship, theories, context, and written record.

    • Contextual information comes from written records that are religious or civic.


Historical Background

  • By 1000, Europe had settled down following the enormous migration of the Early Medieval era.

    • Viking ancestors conquered Normandy, France, southern Italy, and Sicily after being Christianized.

    • Spanish and North African attacks were neutralized, and Europeans started the Crusades to invade Muslim areas.

    • The pope led Europe's Christian empire, which resembled the Roman secular empire.

  • Even though Europeans battled equally, commerce and the arts flourished, and cities thrived for the first time in generations.

    • People traveled throughout Europe on religious pilgrimages to Rome and Jerusalem.

    • The Santiago de Compostela shrine to Saint James was the most popular.

    • As the conclusion of western European pilgrimages, a beautiful Romanesque cathedral was erected.

  • To provide travelers with more sacred sites, shrines were built at strategic spots along the path.

    • One of history's greatest revitalizations was this pilgrimage movement and associated construction boom.

Patronage and Artistic Life

  • Feudalism: a symbiotic connection between lords and peasants—dominated medieval life.

    • Farmworkers fed everyone.

    • Landowners protected peasants.

    • Between these locations, artists become middle class.

    • Painting was valued more than sculpture or building since artists worked less with their hands.

  • Women were limited to "feminine handicrafts" including pottery, weaving, and manuscript decorating.

    • Queens, abbesses, and other powerful women funded nunneries and illuminated manuscripts.

    • Nun Hrotswitha of Gandersheim created plays like Roman poets and playwrights.

    • Hildegard von Bingen, a musician, author, and patroness, was a genius of the time.

  • Although Christian works dominate Romanesque art, many wonderfully made secular works exist.

    • Medieval secular and religious works frequently shared symbolism.

  • Medieval architecture emphasizes castles, manors, monasteries, and cathedrals.

    • Master builders, not architects, designed them and hired the workers.

    • Skilled artists oversaw the building's design with these master builders.


Romanesque Architecture

  • Civic pride, creative expression, and spiritual devotion were found in cathedrals.

    • They took hundreds of years to build

    • They were quite costly

    • They were carefully built and maintained.

    • Church leaders replaced wood roofs with stone to prevent fires.

    • Wood-built ones were occasionally retrofitted.

    • Cathedral: the principal church of a diocese, where a bishop sits

    • The period's moniker, "Romanesque," comes from this resurgence of stone constructions.

  • However, stone was problematic.

    • It's heavy, thus the walls must be thicker to support the roof.

    • To minimize wall holes, windows are modest.

    • It's dark inside.

    • To let more light into the structure, the outside of the windows is thin and the inside is bigger.

    • However, stained glass dimmed rooms.

  • The rib vault was invented by expert builders to sustain these large structures' roofs.

    • Rib vault: a vault in which diagonal arches form riblike patterns. These arches partially support a roof, in some cases forming a web-like design

    • These ribs were originally ornamental moldings on groin vaults, but they later formed a new roof support system.

    • While they do not hold their whole weight, they assist transmit their burden down to the walls and onto the gigantic piers below, which act as buttresses.

    • Rib vaults open up ceiling spaces, allowing for bigger clerestory windows.

      • Clerestory: the window story of a church

    • Rib vaults were created first, followed by stones in the intervals between.

  • Stone is fireproof and has additional benefits.

    • It's robust and waterproof.

    • It also conducts sound effectively, allowing medieval music with Gregorian chant to be sung so that even people in the back of these massive structures could hear the service.

  • The medieval bay is the building block.

    • This space has an arch on the first level, a triforium with smaller arches on the second, and windows in a clerestory on the third.

    • Triforium: A narrow passageway with arches opening onto a nave, usually directly below a clerestory

    • The bay's shape was duplicated throughout the cathedral to create an aesthetic unity.

    • Bay: a vertical section of a church that is embraced by a set of columns and is usually composed of arches and aligned windows

  • An ambulatory, also seen in Early Christian churches, was added to the east end of Romanesque structures to accommodate huge crowds on feast days and pilgrimages.

    • This pathway directed spectators around the cathedral without interrupting the apse festivities.

    • Pilgrims may see relics and other religious things in chapels spaced throughout the ambulatory.

    • They perform well in this environment at Saint Sernin's ambulatory.

    • Abbey: a monastery for monks, or a convent for nuns, and the church that is connected to it

    • Ambulatory: a passageway around the apse of a church

    • Apse: the end point of a church where the altar is

  • Italian buildings have separate bell towers called campaniles to summon people to prayer.

    • Campanile: a bell tower of an Italian building

    • Northern European buildings incorporate this ower into the fabric of the building often over the crossing.

  • Arcade: a series of arches supported by columns. When the arches face a wall and are not self-supporting, they are called a blind arcade

  • Baptistery: in medieval architecture, a separate chapel or building generally in front of a church used for baptisms

  • Compound pier: a gathering of engaged shafts around a pier

  • Gallery: a passageway inside or outside a church that generally is characterized by having a colonnade or arcade

  • Jamb: the side posts of a medieval portal

  • Narthex: the vestibule, or lobby, of a church

  • Portal: a doorway. In medieval art they can be significantly decorated

  • Trumeau (plural: trumeaux): the central pillar of a portal that stabilizes the structure. It is often elaborately decorated

Church of Sainte-Foy

  • Details

    • Romanesque Europe

    • c. 1050–1130, stone

    • Conques, France

  • Form

    • Church built to handle the large number of pilgrims: wide transepts, large ambulatory with radiating chapels.

      • Radiating chapel: a chapel that extends out in a radial pattern from an apse or an ambulatory

      • Transept: an aisle in a church perpendicular to the nave

    • Massive heavy interior walls, unadorned.

    • No clerestory; light provided by windows over the side aisles and galleries.

    • Barrel vaults in nave, reinforced by transverse arches.

      • Transverse arch: an arch that spans an interior space connecting opposite walls by crossing from side to side

    • Cross-like ground plan, called a Latin cross.

  • Function

    • Christian church built along the pilgrimage road to Santiago de Compostela, a popular pilgrimage center for the worship of the relics of Saint James.

    • Radiating chapels housed relics of the saints.

  • Images


Romanesque Sculpture and Painting

  • Large-scale stone sculpture was rare in the Early Medieval period, but the Romanesque revived it.

    • Sculptors were inspired by goldsmiths and other metal artisans, but they created life-size sculptures.

    • Sculpture was often put around medieval church doorways to help worshipers grasp the building's subject.

    • As before, ivories, wooden things, and metallurgy flourished.

  • Illuminated manuscripts and the odd ceiling or wall mural tell us most about Romanesque art.

    • Figures are often black-outlined and brightly colored.

    • Since gestures and emotions are magnified, heads and hands are proportionately the biggest characteristics.

    • Figures seem to float because they fill a blank surface.

    • As in the Bayeux Tapestry, they sometimes tiptoe or glide.

    • People dominate structures that seem like props or stage sets in most Romanesque artwork.

  • Romanesque churches are known for painted stone sculpture.

    • Capitals are carved with Bible scenes.

    • The gateway is Romanesque sculpture's crowning achievement.

    • These masterpieces are in such a prominent place that sculptors competed to carve them.

    • Famous painters were sought by municipalities.

    • Their autographs express their greatness.

  • Despite geographical differences, Romanesque sculpture has certain common traits.

    • Flattened figures with zigzagging draperies obscure body shape rather than define it.

    • A hierarchy of figures is thoroughly developed.

    • Borders are used to frame situations for figures.

    • Preferring to be defined by these boundaries, they seldom challenge them.

  • This epoch also saw smaller, autonomous sculptures.

    • Reliquaries with treasured relics like saints' bones are cherished and lavishly decorated.

    • Reliquary: a vessel for holding a sacred relic. Often reliquaries took the shape of the objects they held. Precious metals and stones were the common material

Last Judgment

  • Details

    • 1050–1130

    • Made of stone and paint

    • Found in Sainte-Foy, Conques

    • Last Judgment: in Christianity, the judgment before God at the end of the world

  • Form

    • Largest Romanesque tympanum.

      • Tympanum (plural: tympana): a rounded sculpture placed over the portal of a medieval church

    • 124 figures densely packed together; originally richly painted.

  • Function

    • Last Judgment cautions pilgrims that life is transitory and one should prepare for the next life.

    • Subject of the tympanum reminds pilgrims of the point of their pilgrimage.

  • Content

    • Christ, as a strict judge, divides the world into those going to heaven and those going to hell.

      • Christ is depicted with a welcoming right hand, a cast down left hand.

      • Christ sits in a mandorla.

      • Mandorla: (Italian for “almond”) an almond-shaped circle of light around the figure of Christ or Buddha

    • A dividing line runs vertically through the cross in the middle of the composition.

    • The Archangel Michael and the devil are at Christ’s feet, weighing souls.

    • Hell, with the damned, is on the right.

    • People enter the church on the right as sinners and exit on the left as saved; the right door has sculptures of the damned and the left door has images of the saved.

    • The figures of the saved move toward Christ, Mary, and Saint Peter; local abbots and monks follow Charlemagne, the legendary benefactor of the monastery, who is led by the hand.

    • Paradise, at the lower level, is portrayed as the heavenly Jerusalem.

    • Sainte Foy interceded for those enslaved by the Muslims in Spain—she herself appears kneeling before a giant hand of God.

    • On the right lower level, the devil presides over a chaotic tangle of tortured condemned sinners.

    • Inscription on lintel: “O Sinners, change your morals before you might face a cruel judgment.

    • Hieratic scale may parallel one’s status in a feudal society.

  • Image

Reliquary of Sainte-Foy

  • Details

    • Made of gold, silver, gemstones, and enamel over wood.

    • 9th ­century, with later additions

    • Found in Sainte-Foy, Conques

  • Form

    • Child saint’s skull is housed in the rather mannish-looking enlarged head.

    • Jewels, gems, and crown added over the years by the faithful, as acts of devotion.

    • Facial expression is haughty and severe.

  • Function: Reliquary of a young girl martyred in the early fourth century.

  • Context

    • Sainte Foy (or Faith) probably died as a martyr to the Christian faith during the persecutions in 303 under Emperor Diocletian; she was tortured over a brazier; she refused to sacrifice to the Roman gods in a pagan ritual.

    • Saint Foy, triumphant over death, looking up and over the viewer’s head.

    • Relics of her body were stolen from a nearby town and enthroned in Conques in 866.

    • One of the earliest large-scale sculptures in the Middle Ages.

  • Image

The Bayeux Tapestry

  • Details

    • Romanesque Europe (English or Norman)

    • 1066–1080

    • Made of embroidery on linen

    • Found in Bayeux Tapestry Museum, Bayeux, France

    • Embroidery: a woven product in which the design is stitched into a premade fabric

    • Tapestry: a woven product in which the design and the backing are produced at the same time on a device called a loom

  • Form

    • Color used in a decorative, although unnatural, manner—different parts of a horse are colored variously.

    • Neutral background of unpainted fabric.

    • Flat figures; no shadows.

  • Content

    • Tells the story (in Latin) of William the Conqueror’s conquest of England at the Battle of Hastings in 1066.

    • The story, told from the Norman point-of-view, emphasizes the treachery of Harold of England, who breaks his vow of loyalty and betrays William by having himself crowned.

    • More than 600 people, 75 scenes.

    • Fanciful beasts in upper and lower registers.

    • Borders sometimes comment on the main scenes or show scenes of everyday life.

  • Function

    • Uncertainty over how this work was meant to be displayed, perhaps in a cathedral hung from the pillars in the nave or hung in a hall along a wall.

  • Technique

    • Tapestry is a misnomer; actually, it’s an embroidery.

    • Probably designed by a man and executed by women.

  • Patronage: Commissioned by Bishop Odo, half-brother to William the Conqueror.

  • Context

    • Continues the narrative tradition of medieval art; 230 feet long.

    • Narrative tradition goes back to the Column of Trajan

  • Image

    Cavalry attack from the Bayeux Tapestry

    First Meal

    Chapter 12: Gothic Art

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