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Tag: medieval

  • St. Bernard and Gargoyles: A Fun Fact

    St. Bernard and Gargoyles: A Fun Fact

    St. Bernard of Clairvaux wasn’t a fan of gargoyles and grotesques. This tells us something interesting about how they were understood at the time.

  • This Stuff’s Expensive: A Fun Fact About Colors

    This Stuff’s Expensive: A Fun Fact About Colors

    Not all paint colors are made the same way, so at one time, some colors were much more difficult to get than others. What was the rarest color?

  • Meetings with Remarkable Manuscripts

    Meetings with Remarkable Manuscripts

    My thoughts on Meetings With Remarkable Manuscripts, a really excellent and informative book about twelve, world-class medieval manuscripts.

  • A Guide to Romanesque Architecture

    A Guide to Romanesque Architecture

    Romanesque was a style of medieval architecture popular in Western Europe in the 1000s and 1100s. Here’s everything you need to know about Romanesque.

  • A Review of the Morgan Library and Museum

    A Review of the Morgan Library and Museum

    My experience at the Morgan Library and Museum, a New York City museum of rare books and manuscripts, works on paper, and other small treasures.

  • A Guide to Gothic Architecture

    A Guide to Gothic Architecture

    Gothic (and Gothic-style) abound in church architecture around the world. But what exactly are its characteristics? Learn the stylistic attributes and historical context of Gothic architecture.

  • Marble House (My Newport Adventures)

    Marble House (My Newport Adventures)

    The Marble House (completed in 1892) was designed by Alva Vanderbilt, who was then the wife of William K. Vanderbilt. The house was designed by Richard Morris Hunt with decoration by Jules Allard and Sons. The Marble House is definitely over the top, yet it feels strangely accessible because none of the rooms are particularly…

  • Ask the Scholarly Skater

    Ask the Scholarly Skater

    Cover image: Duccio di Buoninsegna, The Calling of the Apostles Peter and Andrew, 1308-1311. National Gallery of Art, Washington D.C. (CC0) I recently polled my Facebook friends about their burning art-related questions. I got four great questions, for which I hope I gave four good answers. Do you have an art question you want answered?…

  • More Gargoyles and Grotesques of Reims Cathedral

    This gargoyle on Reims Cathedral seems to have had a head transplant some time since the Middle Ages! The concept is actually not that unusual, since centuries of running water often erode functioning gargoyles over time. It’s difficult to tell from this photo if the replacement was done in metal or a differently-colored stone. Either way, the end result…

  • Gargoyles and Grotesques of Chartres Cathedral

    This grotesque is on the west portal of Chartres Cathedral – among the grandest and most famous of all French Gothic churches. While its close cousin in Paris is famous for its gargoyles, Chartres is celebrated for its beautiful stained glass and profuse sculptural decoration. Much of this sculptural work is clustered around its nine arched doors (portals);…

  • More Gargoyle and Grotesques of Notre Dame de Paris

    Today’s grotesque is a true classic. The gargoyles of Notre Dame cathedral in Paris are neither the oldest nor the most interesting of their kind, but they have certainly become the most famous. The interior and exterior of this church, which was a major milestone in the history of Gothic architecture, were both rather creatively restored by Gothic Revival proponent…

  • Gargoyles and Grotesques of Wells Cathedral, Somerset, UK

    Two weeks ago, I talked about the mouth puller grotesque and how common he can be in Gothic architecture. The grotesque above belongs to a related type – the thorn puller, who struggles to pull a thorn or some other painful irritant out of his foot. The thorn puller appears in many different churches and may…

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