kevin j. benoy social studies department

23
Sutherland Open House February, 2014 Body Building – The Human Cathedral (Architecture from Romanesque to Gothic) Kevin J. Benoy Social Studies Department

Upload: barney

Post on 23-Feb-2016

37 views

Category:

Documents


2 download

DESCRIPTION

Sutherland Open House February, 2014 Body Building – The Human Cathedral (Architecture from Romanesque to Gothic). Kevin J. Benoy Social Studies Department. The Plan. First we will look at a few Medieval architectural developments. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Kevin J.  Benoy Social Studies Department

Sutherland Open HouseFebruary, 2014

Body Building – The Human Cathedral

(Architecture from Romanesque to Gothic)

Kevin J. BenoySocial Studies Department

Page 2: Kevin J.  Benoy Social Studies Department

The Plan

• First we will look at a few Medieval architectural developments.

• Then we will demonstrate those principles using people as building blocks.

• In any remaining time we will look at images of a variety of churches.

Page 3: Kevin J.  Benoy Social Studies Department

From Darkness to Light

Autun CathedralRomanesque interiors were heavy and dark

Chartres CathedralGothic interiors were light

and airy.

Page 4: Kevin J.  Benoy Social Studies Department

Suger’s New Style

• At St. Denis (Paris), Bishop Suger wanted to bring “the light of God” into his Church.

• The engineering techniques were not new, but were never employed together to this effect before.

Page 5: Kevin J.  Benoy Social Studies Department

Suger’s New Style -Pointed Arches

• Gothic pointed arches directed weight downward in a more focused way – the result was that vertical supports could be spaced more widely apart than the old rounded arches allowed.

• Walls no longer need bear so much weight.

Romanesque (Norman) Arches at Gloucester

Gothic Arches at St. Denis

Page 6: Kevin J.  Benoy Social Studies Department

Suger’s New Style – Ribbed Vaults• Romanesque design

took the rounded arch, extending it through space to form a barrel vault where the weight was supported by thick walls.

• The Gothic style added a stone skeleton of ribbed vaults to focus overhead weight onto supporting piers. Walls that no longer bore loads could be filled with glass.

Ribbed vaults in the lower chapel, St. Chappelle, Paris.

Page 7: Kevin J.  Benoy Social Studies Department

Suger’s New style – Flying Buttresses

• Builders have long known that adding outside supports to a wall gave additional strength. Thick Romanesque walls were bolstered by frequent buttressing.

• The flying buttress allowed weight to be transferred to supports pushed outside the building.

Romanesque Buttresses, Autun

Flying Buttresses transferring Weight – Notre Dame, Paris

Page 8: Kevin J.  Benoy Social Studies Department

Suger’s New Style - Gothic• Pointed Arches• Ribbed Vaults• Flying Buttresses• Together, these

features allowed for a new, light, airy, larger, open-plan space that awed medieval viewers and continues to awe people today. Walls of glass – the upper chapel, St. Chappelle, Paris.

Page 9: Kevin J.  Benoy Social Studies Department

Gothic Architecture

• Romanesque buildings had been heavy and squat – and are often lost amid surrounding buildings

• Gothic buildings soared high over their towns and cities.

St. Lazare, Autun

Canterbury Cathedral

Page 10: Kevin J.  Benoy Social Studies Department

Demonstration

• Now it is time for body building.• Would volunteers please partner with people

their own height, arranging themselves from the tallest pair to the shortest pair.

• We will demonstrate, and you will experience, how different vaulting and buttressing revolutionized architecture in the Middle Ages.

Page 11: Kevin J.  Benoy Social Studies Department

St. Lazare - Autun

Page 12: Kevin J.  Benoy Social Studies Department

Notre Dame Cathedral, Laon

Page 13: Kevin J.  Benoy Social Studies Department

Notre Dame Cathedral, Senlis

Page 14: Kevin J.  Benoy Social Studies Department

Notre Dame Cathedral, Amiens

Page 15: Kevin J.  Benoy Social Studies Department

Notre Dame Cathedral, Paris

Page 16: Kevin J.  Benoy Social Studies Department

Notre Dame Cathedral, Chartres

Page 17: Kevin J.  Benoy Social Studies Department

St. Pierre Cathedral, Beauvais

Page 18: Kevin J.  Benoy Social Studies Department

Gloucester Cathedral

Page 19: Kevin J.  Benoy Social Studies Department

Salisbury Cathedral

Page 20: Kevin J.  Benoy Social Studies Department

Canterbury Cathedral

Page 21: Kevin J.  Benoy Social Studies Department

Bath Abbey

Page 22: Kevin J.  Benoy Social Studies Department

Westminster Abbey

Page 23: Kevin J.  Benoy Social Studies Department

finis