Development and Character of Gothic Architecture/Contents
Definition of Gothic
Incorrect ideas respecting Gothic architecture—Aversion to the pointed style first arose in Italy—This style naturally unsuited to Italian tastes and traditions—Gothic art an outgrowth—The genius of the north modified by that of the south—The abandonment of Gothic architecture coincident with the growth of artificial conditions of society—The architecture of the Renaissance not a popular architecture—Awakening of an antiquarian interest in the pointed styles—Growth of a spirit of investigation English and continental misconceptions of Gothic—Architectural styles distinguished primarily by structural characteristics—The Gothic an organic system—Its evolution out of the Romanesque—The Roman constructive system Early Romanesque developments—The constructive advantages of the pointed arch—The flying buttress—Summary of the structural characteristics of Gothic—The system developed in three-aisled buildings—Rudeness not a characteristic of Gothic art—Painting and stained glass—Living character of Gothic sculpture—Antique elements of Gothic ornamentation—Conventional character of Gothic ornament—Organic treatment of constituent elements in Gothic ornament—Architectural fitness of Gothic sculpture Gothic art of short duration—The cathedral edifice the central object of popular interest—The monastic activities in building—The Gothic style developed by the laity—Gothic architecture mainly an architecture of churches—Sources of inspiration Gothic art native to France Pages 1-31
Gothic Construction in France
Pointed Construction in England
Rare occurrence of the pointed arch and of groin ribs in England before the last quarter of the twelfth century—Approach to Gothic principles in the vaults of Malmesbury Abbey—Little approach to Gothic in the buildings immediately following Malmesbury—Structural system of Fountains Abbey—Structural system of Kirkstall Abbey—No important advance takes place in England till after the building of the choir of Canterbury—Structural system of Canterbury—Structural system of Chichester—Structural system of the choir of Lincoln—St. Mary's, New Shoreham—Byland and Whitby—The choir of Ripon—Lack of unity of principle in the early pointed architecture of England—Lack of Gothic principles in the later pointed buildings of England—Multiplication of ribs in later English vaulting—Buttress system and clerestory of Lincoln—Structural system of Salisbury—Structural system of Wells—Structural system of the Abbaye-aux-Dames—The Presbytery of Lincoln—The Cathedral of Lichfield—Modes of enclosure—Characteristics of the east end—Characteristics of transept ends—Characteristics of the west front—Towers and spires—Structural features of the chapter-house—Vaulting of rare occurrence in the smaller churches of England 124-169
Pointed Construction in Germany, Italy, and Spain
Gothic Profiles in France
Functional development governed by artistic feeling in Gothic profiles—The mechanical function of the capital not consistently recognised by the Roman and Romanesque builders—In France, after the eleventh century, the adjustment of the capital to its load was constant—The thickness of the shaft determined largely by the nature of the material used—The thickness of the abacus varies in proportion to the spread of the capital—Abacus and astragal of one piece with the bell in Gothic capitals—The French abacus usually square in plan—The abacus profile—Finest types of capitals belong to the early period of the Gothic style—Changes in the form of the capital consequent upon changes in the arch section—The Gothic base a modification of the ancient Attic base—Its plinth more developed than in the ancient type—The angle spur—The spread of the base usually increased as the diameter of the shaft is diminished—Diminution of the plinth and change of its form in the later Gothic style—String profiles—Evolution of the drip-moulding—Internal strings—The corbel table not a Gothic feature—Arch mouldings—Change in the arrangement of grouped abaci consequent on change in arch profiles—Evolution of mullion profiles 200-223
Profiles of the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries in England and other Countries
Gothic Sculpture in France
Development of mediæval sculpture in France antecedent to that of other countries—Sources of instruction open to the sculptors of Western Europe—New life displayed in the art of the schools of Cluny—Exceptional conditions for the growth of art in the Ile-de-France—The early sculptures of St. Denis—The sculptures of St. Trophime at Arles—Refined qualities of the early sculptures of Chartres—The human figure not employed as a caryatid in Gothic architecture—Statues not placed in niches in this architecture—Relationship of sculpture to structural elements in Gothic art—Early reliefs of St. Denis and Paris manifest a new spirit—Qualities of design, execution, and sentiment in the sculptures of the lintel of Senlis—Natural elements common alike to Greek and mediæval sculpture—Superior freedom of the sculpture of the early thirteenth century—Sculptures of the west front of the Cathedral of Paris—Likeness to Greek art noticeable in these sculptures—Points of similarity in the Greek and mediæval genius—The statue of the Virgin in the south portal of Amiens—The statue of the Virgin in the portal of the north transept of Paris—Gothic sculpture the first in which expression predominates over form—Bodily beauty not ignored by the Gothic carvers—Significance of the grotesque element in Gothic art—The artists of the Ile-de-France the first to emancipate foliate sculpture from old conventions—Expression of nature in early foliate carvings—Early motives for ornament derived from the leafage of springtime—Delicacy of hand manifest in Gothic sculpture—Monumental fitness always regarded by the early carvers—Excessive naturalism of the later Gothic carvings—The quality of breadth in Gothic art—The colouring of Gothic sculpture 247-283
Sculpture of the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries in England and other Countries
Gothic Painting and Stained Glass in France
Figure painting not much employed in Gothic architecture—The characteristics of the figure painting of the twelfth and thirteenth centuries illustrated in the manuscripts of the time—Little progress in the art of painting was made by the Gothic artists—Chromatic design in Gothic art developed chiefly in the department of stained glass—The inherent limitations of this art—This art not capable of development beyond the conditions that were reached in the Middle Ages—Examples of stained glass in St. Denis, Chartres, and other churches 298-304
Painting and Stained Glass in England and other Countries
Nothing different from the painting of France was produced during the twelfth and thirteenth centuries in the other countries of Europe—Earliest development of painting in Italy posterior to the epoch of Gothic art—Technical characteristics of early Italian painting—Its monumental qualities—Its union of pictorial and decorative elements—Its expressional purpose—No peculiar styles of design in stained glass were produced in England, Germany, Italy, or Spain 305-309
Conclusion
The witness of the monuments to the origin of Gothic principles in France borne out by historical considerations—The different and less favourable conditions for the growth of art of England in the Middle Ages—Effects on art of the Norman Conquest—Reaction of the native genius—Slowness of the Germans to modify their Romanesque style—German pointed architecture mainly copied from France—No native development of Gothic in Italy—Lack of constructive character in Italian building—Social and political conditions in Spain unfavourable to development of the arts Pages 310-315
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
fig. page 1. Monolithic Arch and Lintel 6 2. Offset Arch 6 3. Section of a Part of the Flavian Amphitheatre 10 4. Plan of one Bay of the Basilica of Constantine 11 5. Romanesque Pilaster Strip 11 6. Romanesque Buttress 12 7. Section of the Abbaye-aux-Hommes 13 8. Section of the Abbaye-aux-Dames 14 9. Diagram of Round-arched Vault 16 10. Diagram of Pointed-arched Vault 17 11. Diagram of Apsidal Vault of Morienval 34 12. Perspective View of Apsidal Vault of Morienval 35 13. Plan of Apsidal Vault of St. Denis 37 14. Plan of one Bay of S. Michele of Pavia 40 15. Elevation of one Bay of S. Michele of Pavia 41 16. Elevation of one Double Bay of the Abbaye-aux-Hommes 42 17. Section of Main Pier of Senlis 44 18. Elevation of one Double Bay of Senlis 45 19. Section of one Bay of Senlis 46 20. Perspective View of one Double Bay of Senlis 47 21. Section of Pier, Choir of Noyon 49 22. Vaulting System of the Choir of Paris 56 23. Section of Vaulting Shafts of the Nave of Paris 56 24. Vaulting System of the Nave of Paris 57 25. Vaulting System of Laon 58 26. Impost Section of the Choir of Paris 61 27. Impost Section of the Nave of Paris 62 28. Impost Section of the Sixth Pier of the Nave of Paris 63 29. Section of the Sixth Pier of the Nave of Paris 63 30. Section of the Seventh Pier of the Nave of Paris 64 31. Impost Section of the Seventh Pier of the Nave of Paris 64 32. Perspective View of the Seventh Pier of the Nave of Paris 65 33. Section of Pier with Grouped Shafts of Laon 66 34. Imposts of the Choir of Soissons and the Sixth Pier of Paris respectively 67 35. Perspective View of one Bay of the Clerestory of St. Leu d'Esserent 70 36. Section of Vaulting Conoid of St. Leu d'Esserent 71 37. Perspective View of one Bay of the Clerestory of Chartres 73 38. Perspective View of one Bay of the Clerestory of Amiens 75 39. Section of Pier of the Nave of St. Denis 76 40. Flying Buttress of St. Martin of Laon 77 41. Flying Buttress of the Apse of St. Leu d'Esserent 79 42. Flying Buttress of the Nave of St. Leu d'Esserent 80 43. Flying Buttress of the Nave of Noyon 81 44. Flying Buttress of the Nave of Amiens 82 45. Flying Buttress of the Apse of Reims 83 46. Two Bays of the Clerestory of the Nave of Paris 85 46 bis. Clerestory Opening, Nave of Paris, showing Alterations in the Arch 86 47. Clerestory Opening of the Nave of St. Leu d'Esserent 87 48. Aperture of the Apse of Reims 89 49. Plan of the Vault of the Apse of Noyon 93 50. Plan of the Vault of the Apse of Paris 94 51. Plan of the Vault of the Apse of Chartres 96 52. Plan of the Vault of the Apse of Amiens 97 53. Portion of the Interior of the Apse of St. Remi of Reims 98 54. Portion of the Exterior of the Apse of St. Remi of Reims 99 55. Plan of Vaulting of the Apsidal Aisles of Paris 100 56. Interior View of the Apsidal Aisle of St. Leu d'Esserent 101 57. View of the Church of Vaux-sous-Laon 104 58. Façade of the Abbaye-aux-Hommes 105 59. Façade of the Cathedral of Senlis 107 60. Façade of the Cathedral of Paris 109 61. Façade of the Cathedral of Amiens 111 62. Tower of Morienval 113 63. Tower and Spire of Chamant 114 64. Spire of Chartres 115 65. Spire of Senlis 116 66. General View of St. Leu d'Esserent 118 67. General View of the Cathedral of Reims 120 68. Diagram of Aisle Vault of Malmesbury Abbey 124 69. Perspective View of one Bay of Malmesbury Abbey 126 70. Aisle Vault of Fountains Abbey 128 71. Portion of the Interior of the Choir of Canterbury 129 72. One Bay of the Cathedral of Chichester 132 73. Section of Pier, Chichester Cathedral 133 74. Plan of the Original East End of Lincoln Cathedral 135 75. Plan of Vault, Choir of Lincoln Cathedral 136 76. Section of the Choir of Lincoln Cathedral 137 77. Piers at Crossing of Lincoln and Canterbury respectively 138 78. Clerestories of the Abbaye-aux- Dames and the Choir of Lincoln respectively 140 79. Plan of Vault, Nave of Lincoln 144 80. Vaulting Conoid, Nave of Lincoln 145 81. Pier Sections, Nave of Lincoln 145 82. Flying Buttress and Clerestory, Nave of Lincoln 146 83. Vaulting Conoid, Salisbury Cathedral 147 84. Elevation of Clerestory, Salisbury Cathedral 148 85. Interior System of Wells Cathedral 151 86. Interior System of the Abbaye-aux-Dames 152 87. Interior of Clerestory, Presbytery of Lincoln 155 88. Flying Buttress and Clerestory, Presbytery of Lincoln 156 89. Exterior View of the East End of Ely Cathedral 159 90. Exterior View of the East End of Lincoln 161 91. West Façade of Lincoln 163 92. Central Tower of Lincoln 166 93. Elevation of one Bay of the Cathedral of Speyer 171 94. Elevation of one Bay of the Cathedral of Bamberg 172 95. Elevation of one Bay of Limburg on Lahn 174 96. Elevation of one Bay of the Kreuzkirche at Breslau 175 96 bis. Plan of one Bay of the Kreuzkirche at Breslau 176 97. Cross Section of St. Elizabeth at Marburg 177 98. Cross Section of the Cathedral of Poitiers 178 99. Tower and Spire of Breslau 180 100. Tower and Spire of St. Elizabeth at Marburg 180 101. Section through one Bay of Sta. Maria Novella 183 102. Internal System of Sta. Maria Novella 184 103. Section of Pier, Cathedral of Florence 187 104. Internal Pier, Cathedral of Florence 188 105. Façade of the Cathedral of Siena 190 106. Tower and Spire of Sta. Maria Novella 192 107. Tower of the Scaligeri, Verona 193 108. Aisle Windows of Sta. Croce 194 109. Flying Buttress and Clerestory of Burgos Cathedral 197 110. Capital of the Palace of Diocletian 201 111. Capital of the Gallery of Sta. Agnese at Rome 202 112. Capital of the Sanctuary of Senlis 203 113. Capital of the Triforium, Choir of Paris 204 114. Capital of the Triforium, Nave of Paris 205 115. Capital of the Triforium of Laon 206 116. Capital of St. Aignan at Senlis 207 117. Profiles of Early French Mouldings 207 118. Profiles of Abaci 208 119. Capital of Chapel in the Choir of Amiens 209 120. Profile of Base, Nave of Senlis 210 121. Perspective and Profile of Base, Choir of Paris 211 122. Profile of Base, Triforium of Nave of Paris 212 123. Perspective of Base, Triforium of Nave of Paris 212 124. Small Base, Choir of Soissons 213 125. Perspective of Base of West Pier, Nave of Paris 213 126. String Profiles, Nogens-les-Vierges 214 127. String Profiles, St. Evremont, Creil, and Senlis 214 128. Profile of Cornice, Cathedral of Paris 215 129. Profile of Triforium String, Nave of Paris 216 130. Profile of Flat-topped String 216 131. Profiles of Triforium String, Nave of Amiens 217 132. Profiles of Arch Mouldings, Poissy, Morienval, and St. Martin des Champs 218 133. Profiles of Arch Mouldings, St. Denis and Laon 218 134. Profiles of Arch Mouldings, Morienval, St. Denis, Senlis, and Laon 219 135. Profile of Transverse Rib, A psidal Chapel of Senlis 220 136. Rib Sections, Amiens, Beauvais, and Villeneuve 220 137. Plan of Impost, Triforium of Senlis 221 138. Plan of Impost, Nave of Amiens 221 139. Mullion Sections, St. Leu d'Esserent, Reims, and Amiens 222 140. Capital of East Transept, Lincoln 225 141. Capital of Arcade, South Aisle of Choir, Lincoln 226 142. Capital of Arcade, West Transept of Lincoln 227 143. Wreathed Capital, West Transept of Lincoln 229 144. Capital of Arcade, North Choir Screen, Lincoln 230 145. Capital of South Transept, Wells Cathedral 231 146. Moulded Capital, Triforium of Beverley 232 147. Profiles of Abaci, Lincoln, Glastonbury, and Wells 232 148. Profiles of Bases, Lincoln 233 149. Profiles of Bases, Ely, Lincoln, Hexham, and Whitby 233 150. Profiles of Bases, Lincoln and Temple Church 234 151. Base with Angle Spur, Porch of Wells 234 152. String Profiles, Lincoln, Glastonbury, and Wells 235 153. Perspective View of Round Impost, Southwell 236 154. Arch Section, Malmesbury Abbey 237 155. Arch Section, Choir of Lincoln 237 156. Section of Vault Rib, Choir of Lincoln 238 157. Capitals, Cathedral of Magdeburg 240 158. Base, Cathedral of Magdeburg 241 159. Capital of Triforium of Choir, Cologne 241 160. Profile of Base, Cologne Cathedral 242 161. Profile of Arch Moulding, Cologne Cathedral 242 162. Capital of Nave, Sta. Maria Novella 243 163. Profiles of Bases, Sta. Maria Novella, Cathedral of Florence, and Sta. Croce 244 164. Profile of Vault Rib, Cathedral of Florence 246 165. Figures from Greek MS., National Library of Paris 248 166. Figure from Greek MS., National Library of Paris 248 167. Sculpture of Notre-Dame du Port, Clermont-Ferrand 250 168. Statue of St. Trophime, Aries 251 169. Statue of Transept, St. Denis 252 170. Statue of West Front, Chartres 253 171. Sculpture of Lintel, Senlis 256 172. Sculpture of Tympanum, Portal of the Virgin, Paris 260 173. Statue of North Transept, Paris 263 174. Sculpture of the Portal of the Virgin, Paris 267 175. Capital of Sanctuary, Noyon Cathedral 268 176. Capital of the Abbaye-aux-Dames 269 177. Acanthoid Leafage 270 178. Capital of Triforium of Nave, Senlis 271 179. Crockets of Triforium of Nave, Paris 272 180. Capital of the Chapel of the Catechists, Paris 275 181. Sculpture of Archivolt, Paris 276 182. Sculpture of Triforium String, Amiens 277 182 bis. Sculpture of Cornice, Amiens 278 183. Sculpture of String-Course, Noyon 279 184. Sculpture of Archivolt, Porte Rouge, Paris 280 185. Sculpture of West Front, Lincoln 285 186. Statue of West Front, Wells 286 187. Sculpture on Lintel, Transept of Southwell 288 188. Sculpture of Leaf Forms, Lincoln 290 189. Capital of Triforium of Nave, Lincoln 291 190. Design from MS. Life of St. Denis 300 191. Figure from the Jesse Window, Chartres 303