Innovation During the Middle Ages

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The Middle Ages, contrary to its name, was a dynamic period of innovations. Throughout this period, visual arts were employed to communicate important messages to the public as well as private wealthy patrons. A variety of mediums were used to disseminate ideas. Though, the sense of decorum shifted, the purpose of these moralizing images of religious figures remained the same. Art was, as it still is an extremely useful and powerful tool for both religious and political advancements. The two pieces to be considered in this paper were created using scenes from the life of Christ. Themes from the old and new testaments were frequently used in art of the Middle Ages to convey important messages to a largely illiterate populous, display the wealth of few individuals, and create feelings of patriotism and support for the Monarch by relating them to divinity. Both pieces are from different mediums and likely different forms of patronage. To be analyzed in this paper is an illuminated manuscript page (fig 1) and an ivory diptych (fig 2). There are several similarities, as well as differences throughout the works. I will describe each piece then continue to compare and contrast them, this will work to facilitate a greater understanding of the Middle Ages through works of art.

The illuminated manuscript page (fig 1) was a popular art form throughout the Middle Ages. Illuminated manuscripts, ornamented manuscript pages executed on an animal skin called vellum , were popular throughout the Middle Ages. A majority of these colorful pages that survive were produced during the Romanesque era, on request of the clergymen and emperors. Done on vellum, an animal skin with ink. Charlemagne, arguably the most important emperor of the Carolingian dy...

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...eated in different eras, style as well as well as mediums they still possess many similarities. This is a testimony to the complex communications that occurred in the Middle Ages between all forms of creation.

bibliography

1. J.A Herbert, Illuminated Manuscripts (New York: B. Franklin, 1969),

2. Heinrich Fichtenau, The Carolingian Empire (Oxford: Blackwell, 1957), 82

3. “Carolingian Art”, accessed March 5, 2011, http://www.visual-arts-cork.com/history-of-art/carolingian-art.htm.

4. Consular Diptychs and Christian Ivories,”The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin 13 (1918): 8, accessed Februaru 3, 2011

5. Georg Swarzenski, “The Gothic ivory diptych,” Bulletin of the Fogg Art Museum 10 (1947)

6. Peter Barnet and Nancy Wu, The Cloisters, Medieval Art and Architecture (New York: The Metropolitain Museum of Art; New Haven: Yale University Press, 2005

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