Gothic architecture and art: Other Gothic Arts
Other Gothic Arts
Monumental fresco painting was rare in the Gothic period except in Italy, where the massive walls remained instead of yielding to the tall skeletal structure found elsewhere. In the rest of Europe stained glass and tapestry assumed greater importance and showed a stylistic development analogous to that of sculpture.
Another aspect of Gothic painting was manuscript illumination, in which text and pictures formed a united composition. From the beginning of the 13th cent., illuminations were done for the courts by lay schools. The Paris school achieved a perfection which made it the center of Gothic painting for nearly two centuries. English miniatures are often indistinguishable from the French in this period. The painters of the Avignon school flourished from 1309, when the papal court was moved there from Rome. This school produced one work, a
Sections in this article:
- Introduction
- The Waning of the Gothic Style
- Other Gothic Arts
- Gothic Sculpture
- Late Gothic Styles
- Gothic Architecture Outside France
- Landmarks of French Gothic Architecture
- Characteristics of Gothic Architecture
- The Nature of the Gothic
- Bibliography
The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, 6th ed. Copyright © 2024, Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
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