ARTH 422 (S) Making the Stones Speak: The Emergence and Development Of the
Romanesque Sculpted Portal
Beginning around the year 1000, European Christendom experienced a great ecclesiastical
building boom. According to a contemporary chronicler, "it was as if the whole
earth, having cast off the old by shaking itself, were clothing itself everywhere
in the white robe of the church." During the course of the eleventh century,
the designers of these structures fashioned a new architectural language that
we now label "Romanesque." One of the most innovative and dramatic aspects of
this new language was its assimilation of monumental sculpture, absent in Europe
since the fifth century. The focus of attention in this regard was the portal,
which marked the threshold between the profane realm of the outside world and
the sacred space of the church. This seminar will investigate the antecedents
and origins of the Romanesque sculpted portal and examine in detail its greatest
manifestations. Emphasis will be placed on understanding these often complex
sculptural schemes within their original functional and physical contexts. What
role did this imagery play in structuring the medieval visitor's overall experience
of the church? And what did it mean to have this imagery carved into the very
fabric of "God's temple"? Requirements: class discussion, class presentation,
15- to 20-page research paper. Prerequisites: ArtH 101-102. Enrollment limit:
15. Preference given to Art majors.
Hour:LOW