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9780271083445 Add to Cart Academic Inspection Copy

Framing the Church:

The Social and Artistic Power of Buttresses in French Gothic Architecture
  • ISBN-13: 9780271083445
  • Publisher: PENN STATE UNIVERSITY PRESS
    Imprint: PENN STATE UNIVERSITY PRESS
  • By Maile S. Hutterer
  • Price: AUD $217.00
  • Stock: 0 in stock
  • Availability: This book is temporarily out of stock, order will be despatched as soon as fresh stock is received.
  • Local release date: 15/03/2020
  • Format: Hardback 224 pages Weight: 0g
  • Categories: History of architecture [AMX]
Description
Table of
Contents
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Framing the Church takes a nontraditional approach to the study of the hallmark of French Gothic architecture: the buttress. In a series of case studies spanning approximately five hundred years and incorporating some of Gothic France's most significant monuments, Maile S. Hutterer examines the aesthetics, social processes, and iconography of flying buttresses and buttress piers to explain how they supported the church both symbolically and structurally.
 
Surrounding all or part of a building with periodically spaced massive piers, the buttressing frame defines an edge that simultaneously maintains permeability, creating an intermediary space around the structure. Making extensive use of archival sources, Hutterer argues that the areas between the buttresses distinguished the consecrated, sacred ground of the church interior from its unconsecrated, nonsacred surroundings, a division that was of increasing concern to theologians in the High Middle Ages. She traces how, over the course of the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, artists and patrons increasingly associated buttressing frames with sacred places through the incorporation of sculptural programs related to theology, processions, and protection. In this way, buttressing frames mediated the interaction between visitor and building and participated in the liturgical and ritual purpose of the church's structure.
 
Original and persuasive, this book illuminates the buttresses' social and religious meaning for medieval viewers by introducing architectural iconography to a form that is primarily understood in terms of its structural utility. It will be welcomed by students and scholars of medieval architecture and medieval French history.

List of Illustrations

Acknowledgments

Note on the Fire at the Cathedral of Notre-Dame, Paris, 2019

Introduction

1. Visualizing Buttressing and the Aesthetics of the Frame

2. Negotiating Buttress Spaces

3. Sculptural Programs and the Assertion of Ecclesiastical Hegemony

4. Buttressing-Frame Systems as Signs of Spiritual Protection

Conclusions

Notes

Bibliography

Index



Framing the Church explores the multivalent impact of the new buttressing systems that transformed Gothic architecture. Anchored by case studies of French buildings from twelfth to the sixteenth centuries, Maile Hutterer creates a rich conversation between ecclesiastical and secular architecture, the visual arts, and historical sources to reveal the push and pull between aesthetics and stability in the design of structural frames, their surprising social consequences, and their role as agents of symbolic expression.”

—Michael T. Davis, Mount Holyoke College

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