Showing posts with label Gothic era. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gothic era. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 28, 2022

Art Eyewitness Review: Medieval Treasures from the Glencairn Museum at the Philadelphia Museum of Art

 

Medieval Treasures from the Glencairn Museum

Philadelphia Museum of Art

June 24, 2022 - Autumn 2023

Reviewed by Ed Voves  

Original photos by Anne Lloyd

In the prologue to Henry V, William Shakespeare asked if the "cockpit" of the Globe Theatre, shaped like a "wooden o", could provide the setting for retelling the story of the Battle of Agincourt.

We can well raise similar questions about the effectiveness of museums in presenting special exhibitions. When carefully chosen works of art are displayed in a gallery space, can they call forth a "Muse of fire" to ignite our imaginations as Shakespeare did?

In the case of a small, focused exhibition at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, Medieval Treasures from the Glencairn Museum, the answer is a resounding yes! 

A choice selection from Glencairn's renowned collection of art from the Middle Ages is on view in the exhibit, a long-term loan while building renovations are being made at Glencairn. 



Anne Lloyd, Photo (2022)
 Gallery view of Medieval Treasures from the Glencairn Museum

From masterpieces of carved ivory, the earliest dating to around the year 500, to luminous stained glass panels from the era of the Gothic Cathedrals, the exhibition distills the very essence of the culture of Christendom. 

Medieval art was overwhelmingly spiritual in orientation and intended for instructional purposes. But the core humanity of the people who populate the scenes of sacred history on the stained glass panels and church sculptures from Glencairn often transcend the boundaries of theological doctrines. 



Anne Lloyd, Photo (2022) 
The Visitation from the Church of St. Radegonde, c.1270-1275

When we view the greeting of the Virgin Mary and her older cousin, Anne, in  this depiction of the biblical episode known as the Visitation, we are moved to join in their embrace - and extend it to all humanity. Over and over again, the Glencain "treasures" banish all lingering prejudices regarding the medieval era as a "dark age."



Ed Voves, Photo (2021) View of Glencairn Museum, Bryn Athyn, PA

In the early summer of 2021, I visited the Glencairn Museum, located in Bryn Athyn, PA, about fifteen miles north of center city Philadelphia. I won't repeat the story of how the Bryn Athyn Cathedral and the Glencairn Museum came to be built by Raymond Pitcairn (1885-1966). But it has to be emphasized, once again, that "Pitcairn brought the passion and work ethic of the castle and cathedral builders of the Middle Ages to his great venture."  

Like Bishop Bernward, patron of the great German abbey church of St. Michael's at Hildesheim (built 1001-1031) and Abbot Suger, who pioneered the design of Gothic cathedrals a century later, Pitcairn believed in acquiring treasures of religious art to display in his magnificent edifice. 

Although Glencairn has excellent examples of ancient Egyptian, Graeco-Roman and religious art from around the world, medieval European art is the museum's premier attraction. Pitcairn collected approximately 600 works of art, mostly from the Romanesque and early Gothic periods in France, 1100-1300, with special attention to stone carvings and stained glass window panels.

From this world-class array of medieval art, curator Jack Hinton of the Philadelphia Museum of Art (PMA) chose 18 magnificent works of art. But before we examine these treasures from Glencairn, two important points need to be underscored. 

Medieval Treasures from the Glencairn Museum is the latest collaboration between the two museums, dating back to the 1930's. There are a number of other Glencairn works currently on view in the medieval galleries of the PMA. Indeed, some have been on long-term loan for so many years that these works appear to be permanent features of the PMA. 



Anne Lloyd, Photo (2021)
 Gallery view of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, showing Corpus of Christ, late 1200's, & Effigy of a Recumbent Knight, c.1230

This is the case for one of the museum's most effective displays, the pairing of a late thirteenth century crucifixion from Glencairn with the tomb effigy of a recumbent knight from the PMA's collection. 

This Corpus of Christ (as the painted wooden statue is also called) reflects the emphasis upon Jesus' humanity and suffering as preached by St. Francis of Assisi (1181/82-1226). When placed above the monument to an unknown knight of the Crusading-era, this sculptural ensemble symbolizes Europe's Age of Faith in a profoundly moving way.



                                        Anne Lloyd, Photo (2022)                                   Entrance to the Medieval Treasures from the Glencairn Museum exhibit at the Philadelphia Museum of Art

It is entirely fitting that Medieval Treasures from the Glencairn Museum is on display in one of the PMA's galleries devoted to the Middle Ages, only a moment's walk from the Corpus of Christ and the sleeping knight. Stepping through the doorway of Gallery 307 to view the exhibit evokes the feeling of arriving at journey's end on a medieval pilgrimage.



Anne Lloyd, Photo (2022)
 View of Stained Glass Panels from the Glencairn Museum Collection

The first works of art to strike the eye upon entering the exhibit is the bank of five radiant panels of stained glass from the early Gothic era. These are positioned on the wall opposite to the door, yet their appeal is impossible to resist.

I was drawn immediately to these wondrous art works, particularly to the central panel, The Flight into Egypt. Commissioned by Abbot Suger for the reconstruction of the royal chapel of France, the Abbey Church at Saint-Denis, it dates to 1140-1144. This rare, color-drenched panel is one of the earliest surviving pieces of stained glass in an American art collection.

The Flight into Egypt was also, for several years during the 1970's, a very controversial work of art. Scholarly opinion was divided on whether it was a forgery. It took a long, intensive campaign to prove its authenticity. The dogged determination of a Columbia University grad student, Michael Cothren, and the scientific analysis of Robert Brill of the Corning Museum of Glass insured that The Flight into Egypt regained its status as one of the world's greatest works of medieval art.


                                    Anne Lloyd, Photo (2022)                                      The Flight into Egypt, from the Chapel of St. Denis, c. 1145

To describe The Flight into Egypt as iconic is, for once, entirely appropriate. 

After only a few moments of viewing The Flight into Egypt, one can begin to reach a better understanding of the medieval world view. It was a state of mind where the biblical past was very much alive. Religious pilgrimages figured prominently as deeds of faith. And if one could not make the ultimate journey to Jerusalem, then a visit to a cathedral closer to home, emblazoned with stained glass windows depicting the lives of Jesus, his mother Mary and other saintly persons, would suffice.


        
Detail of The Flight into Egypt, St. Denis, c. 1145

Likewise, people during the Middle Ages had no problem in believing tales not found in sacred scripture. In The Flight into Egypt, we see Mary picking a fig from a tree which her infant son (who looks remarkably mature) had commanded to lower its branch for her convenience. Incredible, even ridiculous, to our minds, yet such a story would have given encouragement to pilgrims enduring an arduous journey to Chartres, Santiago or even Jerusalem.

Another of the Glencairn stained glass panels strikes an even more apocryphal note. In the legend of the Seven Sleepers of Ephesus, a group of early Christians, fleeing persecution, sought refuge in a cave, which was sealed-up by Roman soldiers. Instead of dying, they fall asleep, waking-up many years later like Rip van Winkle. 



Anne Lloyd, Photo (2022) 
 The Arrest of Malchus in The Seven Sleepers of Ephesus window from Rouen Cathedral, c.1200-1203

One of the seven, Malchus, is arrested for trying to buy bread for breakfast with a now-vintage Roman coin. Ephesus, his home town, had converted to Christianity while he and his companions slumbered, but Malchus, as we see in the charming scene, above, is once again on the wrong side of the law.

Miraculous or far-fetched - or somewhere in between - stories drawn from the Bible and popular religious tales were best told in pictorial format. Romanesque churches featured vigorous, colorful fresco paintings, but in the cold, damp climate of Europe, north of the Alps, these quickly lost their lustre. Stained glass, far more difficult to create, lasted longer. The master glass makers of the Gothic cathedrals, developed an eye for dramatic scene composition that modern-day film makers could not surpass.

The economy of creative effort used in creating narratives of Gothic-era stained glass is readily apparent in Salome Dancing at the Feast of Herod. This was one of a series of roundels depicting the life and death of St. John the Baptist from a church in northern France. While the series progresses like movie storyboards, each roundel is brilliantly self-contained, none more so than this one of sexy Salome's dance.


                                        Anne Lloyd, Photo (2022)                                     Salome Dancing at the Feast of Herod, c. 1235

Here we see the sword-wielding Salome, gyrating at the feet of Herod Antipas. Her mother, Herodias, urges the irresolute Herod to strike at John the Baptist. While the other scenes in the series, (Glencairn owns two more) are equally forceful, this brilliant episode is an absolute masterpiece.

This array of stained glass panels is so brilliant that it was hard to redirect my attention to the other works of art in Medieval Treasures from the Glencairn Museum. Yet, just a few feet away was a Romanesque sculpture, carved from limestone around 1150-60, which rivals the narrative inventiveness and emotional intensity of the stained glass panels.



Anne Lloyd, Photo (2022)
 Capital with the Story of Dives and Lazarus, c. 1150-60

Capital with the Story of Dives and Lazarus would have perched atop a column at the Abbey of Moutiers-Saint-Jean, France. It shows Jesus' parable of the pious, impoverished Lazarus and rich, selfish Dives. Lazarus dies in misery but is redeemed, coming to rest "in the bosom of Abraham." Dives, clutched in the jaws of damnation, begs that Lazarus dip his finger into water to relieve his agony.



                                       Anne Lloyd, Photo (2022)                                  Capital with the Story of Dives and Lazarus (detail)

Romanesque sculptures like this capital were once viewed as "primitive" but are now regarded as masterful interpretations of the conflict of good and evil. If outwardly simplistic in its moral judgement, the Lazarus/Dives carving conveys a degree of psychological intensity that certainly informed the mind and guided the hand of the sculptor who made it.  

The terror on the face of Dives when he realizes that he faces divine wrath for his cruel, heedless mistreatment of Lazarus is unforgettable, ranking with images from classic cinema of the 1920's or Francis Bacon's "screaming" popes.


Detail of Capital with the Story of Dives and Lazarus, c.1150-60

Skillful story-telling is indeed a prevailing theme of medeaval art. To an amazing degree, Medieval Treasures from the Glencairn Museum evokes the spirit of the Middle Ages. The "genius" is there in the details of these works and in their skillful juxtaposition in the display cases of the exhibition.


                                       Anne Lloyd, Photo (2022)                                      Gallery view of Medieval Treasures from Glencairn Museum, showing Ivory Box from Spain & Sculpted Head by Giselbertus

Two small artifacts - incredibly so - offer insight into the development of medieval art. The first is a small box, carved from ivory, in Spain, around the year 700. It is placed  next to a sculpted "crowned" head, hardly bigger than a man's clenched fist. Together, these diminutive works of art reveal much about the course of European art during the early Middle Ages.

The carving on the ivory box narrates two episodes in the life of King Solomon, including his crafty judgement of ordering  a baby sliced in two, so that rival women, each claiming to be the child's mother, coud have an equal share of the corpse. (The deed, thankfully, never was carried out.) 



  Anne Lloyd, Photo (2022) 
Box with Scenes from the Book of Kings, c. 700

Though the incident was biblical in origin, the carving on the box was entirely Germanic. Spain, following the collapse of Roman rule, was dominated by Visigothic kings. Brave in battle but inept as administrators, the Visigoths succumbed to the Moorish invasion of Spain in 711.

The ineffectual rule of the Visigoths is reflected in this curious ivory box. But the "crowned" head, displayed in the same  case, shows how far the artistic skill of Europe's sculptors had progressed by the time it was carved, sometime in the early 1100's. It too represents a king, perhaps King Solomon. But the identity of the maker, rather than the subject, is what counts.

The man who carved this Head of a King was almost certainly Giselbertus. His reputation as "one of the great geniuses of medieval art" is based on the astonishing carved scene of the Last Judgement which he sculpted for Autun Cathedral, 1125-1130. Skill alone, however, does not account for the renown of Giselbertus. At the base of his depiction of Christ at Autun, Giselbertus contributed an unexpected detail: his name.

Giselbertus hoc fecit. Giselbertus made this.



Anne Lloyd, Photo (2022)
 Head of a King. Attributed to Giselbertus, Mid-1100's

Looking at this small head reveals that its features are very similar to those on the figures of the Autun Last Judgement. This is the main reason that scholars believe it was carved by Giselbertus. For my part, I was struck by the mobility of expression of the face, of the fey quality of the character of the king, when viewed from different angles. He looks sly and devious on one side, impassive on the other. This might well be a portrait of King Solomon. 

In signing his name on the Autun sculpture, Giselbertus brought medieval art to the point where artists ceased being anonymous. Credit would be given where it was due. Centuries would pass before this process would be complete, but thanks to Giselbertus, artistic individualism had received a huge boost.

This transition in art, from Romanesque to Gothic, with growing public recognition for artists, is the endpoint of the Medieval Treasures from Glencairn exhibit. But the modern-day part of the story has a further chapter to relate: the important role which Raymond Pitcairn played in the development of the Philadelphia Museum of Art.

When the Philadelphia Museum of Art opened in 1927, its first director, Fiske Kimball, worked on a master plan to transform the museum's third floor into a chronological succession of galleries and period rooms. When complete, this would enable art lovers to follow the course of  Western art from the Middle Ages to modern times.



Anne Lloyd, Photo (2022)
 Gallery view of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, 
showing the Fountain from the Monastery of St Michel-de-Cuxa

Fiske Kimball, a brilliant scholar of architecture, was able to place in the museum galleries surviving remains from historic buildings in Europe such as the fountain from the Monastery of St Michel-de-Cuxa and the Portal of the Abbey of Saint-Laurent. This gives visitors a "you are there" passport to the Middle Ages. 

However, the PMA's master plan soon hit a major obstacle. The Stock Market collapse of 1929 and the ensuing Great Depression gravely affected donations of funds and works of art to the museum. Many of the galleries remained empty. As Fiske Kimball and his staff labored to achieve their audacious goal, critics lampooned the museum as a "Grecian parking garage."

Raymond Pitcairn helped Fiske Kimball deal with the dilemma of providing works of art for the fourteen galleries designated for the study of medieval art and culture. During the Depression decade, Pitcairn loaned approximately 70 art works to the PMA, along with several donations. The loans included many of his most treasured sculptures and paintings including the fourteenth century fresco, Christ in Majesty, from a church in Spoleto, Italy. 



Anne Lloyd, Photo (2021) Corpus of Christ, late 1200's

As noted earlier, in the case of the Corpus of Christ, many of Pitcairn's loaned art works graced the medieval galleries of the PMA for very long periods of time. Even after 1945, when funds became available for Fiske Kimball to purchase a large collection of medieval art for the PMA, Pitcairn continued to generously support the museum.

As I left Gallery 307, where Medieval Treasures from the Glencairn Museum will hang until repairs at Glencairn are finished in the fall of 2023, I was in a thoughtful mood. I reflected on the vital role of enlightened artists and patrons, whose contributions make civilized life meaningful - indeed possible. 



Anne Lloyd, Photo (2022)
 Border panel, from the Moses Window, Church of Saint-Denis, c. 1145

Where would we be without visionaries like Abbot Suger, without the stained glass masters who made The Flight into Egypt or gifted sculptors like Giselbertus?

Where would we be - in our own age of great wars, great plagues and great depression - without the likes of Raymond Pitcairn?

***

Text: Copyright of Ed Voves, all rights reserved                                              Images copyright of Anne Lloyd 

Introductory Image: 

Anne Lloyd, Photo (2022) The Flight into Egypt, from the Infancy of Christ Window (detail)

Anne Lloyd, Photo (2022) Gallery view of Medieval Treasures from the Glencairn Museum at the Philadelphia Museum of Art.

Anne Lloyd, Photo (2022)  The Visitation from the Church of St. Radegonde. Artist unknown, France. Stained glass. c. 1270-1275. 30 1/2 × 23 7/8 inches (77.5 × 60.6 cm). On loan from Glencairn Museum, Bryn Athyn, PA. 

Ed Voves, Photo (2021)  View of Glencairn Museum, Bryn Athyn, PA

Anne Lloyd, Photo (2021) Gallery view of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, showing Corpus of Christ, late 13th century, painted wooden statue on loan from the Glencairn Museum and Recumbent Knight from a Tomb Sculpture, France, c. 1230, from the Philadelphia Museum of Art collection.

Anne Lloyd, Photo (2022) Entrance to the Medieval Treasures from the Glencairn Museum exhibit at the Philadelphia Museum of Art.

Anne Lloyd, Photo (2022) View of Stained Glass Panels from the Glencairn Museum Collection.

Anne Lloyd, Photo (2022) The Flight into Egypt, from the Infancy of Christ Window (?), from the Abbey Church of St. Denis, France. Stained glass. c. 1145. 20 1/2 × 19 3/4 inches (52.1 × 50.2 cm). On loan from Glencairn Museum, Bryn Athyn, PA. 

Anne Lloyd, Photo (2022) The Flight into Egypt (detail)

Anne Lloyd, Photo (2022)  Malchus is Led before the Bishop and Prefect from The Seven Sleepers of Ephesus window of the nave aisle of Rouen Cathedral. Stained glass. c. 1200-1203.  24 1/2 × 23 1/4 inches (62.6 × 59 cm).On loan from Glencairn Museum 

Anne Lloyd, Photo (2022) Salome Dancing at the Feast of Herod, Stained glass roundel from the Church of Saint-Martin, Breuil-le-Vert, France, c.1235.  diameter: 47. 5 cm. (18 11/16 inches) On loan from Glencairn Museum, Bryn Athyn, PA.

Anne Lloyd, Photo (2022) Capital with the Story of Dives and Lazarus. Artist unknown, from the Abbey of Moutiers-Saint-Jean, France. Limestone. c. 1150-60. 25 × 11 × 14 1/2 inches (63.5 × 27.9 × 36.8 cm). On loan from Glencairn Museum, Bryn Athyn, PA.

Anne Lloyd, Photo (2022) Capital with the Story of Dives and Lazarus (detail)

Anne Lloyd, Photo (2022) Gallery view of Medieval Treasures from Glencairn Museum, showing Ivory Box from Spain & Sculpted Head by Giselbertus

Anne Lloyd, Photo (2022) Box with Scenes from the Book of Kings. Artist Unknown, Spain. Ivory. c. 700. Approx.: 3 × 6 × 3 inches (7.6 × 15.2 × 7.6 cm). On loan from Glencairn Museum, Bryn Athyn, PA.

Anne Lloyd, Photo (2022) Head of a King. Attributed to Giselbertus, from Autun, Burgundy. Limestone. Mid-1100's. 5 1/8 × 3 1/4 × 3 5/8 inches (13× 8.2 × 9.2 cm). On loan from Glencairn Museum, Bryn Athyn, PA.

Anne Lloyd, Photo (2022) Gallery view of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, showing the Fountain from the Monastery of St. Michel-de-Cuxa.

Anne Lloyd, Photo (2022) Corpus of Christ, late 1200's, from the Glencairn Museum collection, on view at the Philadelphia Museum of Art.

Anne Lloyd, Photo (2022) Border panel, from the Moses Window (?), Artist Unknown, Abbey Church of Saint-Denis, France. Stained glass. c. 1145. 19 1/4 × 9 inches (48.9 × 22.9 cm). On loan from Glencairn Museum

Sunday, June 20, 2021

Art Eyewitness Essay: A Visit to Glencairn Museum


Art Eyewitness Essay: 

A Visit to Glencairn Museum, Bryn Athyn, Pennsylvania

By Ed Voves

 A few days ago, I made a pilgrimage to the world of the Middle Ages. The journey took about thirty minutes and fifteen miles. No time-machines or "Beam me up, Scotty" transporters were required. Instead, a friend and I visited the Glencairn Museum in Bryn Athyn, PA.

Glencairn Museum is one of several remarkable, though little known, museums which were built by wealthy individuals on the outskirts of Philadelphia during the early decades of the twentieth century. The Barnes Foundation, now relocated to center city Philly, is the most well-know of these institutions. But for sheer, awe-inspiring majesty, Glencairn and the adjacent Bryn Athyn Cathedral are worthy of comparison with any of the great public museums of the United States - and of Europe, as well.

Glencairn and Bryn Athyn Cathedral need to be considered together because these stunning edifices were the creation of the same visionary builder, Raymond Pitcairn (1885-1966). Although not a trained architect, Pitcairn brought the passion and work ethic of the cathedral builders of the Middle Ages to his great venture.  

Glencairn Museum and Bryn Athyn Cathedral manifest the religious principles of Raymond Pitcairn. He and his family embraced the teachings of Emanuel Swedenborg, a great Christian mystic and theologian of the eighteenth century. Swedenborg's interpretation of Holy Scripture provides the foundation of the General Church of the New Jerusalem, as this denomination is formally known. 

Disciples of Swedenborg came to Philadelphia following the American Revolution. Originally, their main house of worship was located in a heavily populated section of the city. Following the Civil War, a tract of rural land was purchased, roughly fourteen miles north of the earlier church. This area was known as Bryn Athyn due to the fact that many early settlers of the region had come from Wales. 

 


Panoramic view of Glencairn Museum (left) and Cairnwoord Estate. Copyright of the Glencairn Museum

Bryn Athyn is still beautiful today. Developed as an enclave of the New Church, an educational campus, a splendid cathedral similar in design to Gloucester Cathedral in England and an imposing museum were built in its sylvan setting.  

If Raymond Pitcairn played the leading role in building Glencairn Museum and Bryn Athyn Cathedral, the role of his father needs to be emphasized as well. A rags-to-riches immigrant from Scotland, John Pitcairn (1841-1916) rose to be director of the Pittsburgh Plate Glass Company. The elder Pitcairn funded the move to Bryn Athyn, Given the singular importance of stained glass in the collection of Glencairn Museum, it is well to remember him when we look at the stunning lancet windows, copied from those of Chartres Cathedral, which his son installed in his medieval-inspired stronghold.

 


                                       Ed Voves, Photo (2021)                                           Balcony statue & north wall lancet window depicting King Solomon (above) and King Jeroboam, the Great Hall of Glencairn Museum.

John Pitcairn also played an important role in the creation of Glencairn's collection of 8,000 works of art. In 1878, he and William Benade, another leading New Church member, set off on a grand tour of Europe, the Middle East and Egypt. While on their travels, they conceived the idea of collecting art works and antiquities for a museum dedicated to religion. Although it was over a century before Glencairn Museum formally opened, in 1982, this was the moment of its conception. 



Ed Voves, Photo (2021) Bryn Athyn Cathedral

Glencairn Museum and Bryn Athyn Cathedral recreate the two great epochs of the medieval world in Western Europe, Romanesque and Gothic. Bryn Athyn Cathedral was the first to be built, during the years, 1913-1928. The basic (Gothic) architectural plan was devised by Ralph Adams Cram (1863-1942) who also designed the Cathedral of Saint John the Divine in New York City. 

Cram was a superb architect, but Raymond Pitcairn was profoundly moved by the spirit of the Middle Ages. Pitcairn was determined to include quirky irregularities such as appear in real medieval buildings.  Not for him the stylistic uniformity of the imagined Middle Ages which we know as Gothic Revival. 

Cram deferred to Pitcairn in the later stages of constructing Bryn Athyn Cathedral. The resulting building contains elements of the Romanesque era and the succeeding Gothic period, just as can be found in many churches from the Middle Ages, which often took decades to complete.

Rather than relying on blue prints, Pitcairn utilized architectural models in wood and plaster, many of them full-scale, to master the construction details of Bryn Athyn Cathedral and Glencairn. It was a very unorthodox and, ultimately, successful way to build a cathedral and a castle.



Raymond Pitcairn examines an early plaster model of Glencairn

Bryn Athyn Cathedral was still in its finishing stages when Pitcairn began work on an equally monumental building. It would be a new family home, built in the Romanesque style which had flourished in Western Europe during the eleventh century, the age of the Norman Conquest of England and the First Crusade.

A towering, fortress-like edifice, made largely of granite, Pitcairn's new abode was situated but a short walk from the Bryn Athyn Cathedral and from the Louis XIII-styled mansion which his father had commissioned during the late 1800's. It would be called "Glencairn," fusing the surname of Pitcairn's wife, Glenn, with his own.



Ed Voves, Photo (2021) Glencairn Museum, Bryn Athyn, PA.

Glencairn was built during the decade of the Great Depression. Despite the economic calamity which brought non-government building programs to a standstill throughout the U.S., Pitcairn kept as many workmen on his payroll as he could. Construction was finished by 1939. Work on the stained glass windows continued for some years afterward.

Glencairn combines the rugged power of stone battlements with the enlightened spirit of the art of Christendom. There are ninety rooms, one of them a "Great Hall" of jaw-dropping dimensions.

 

Ed Voves, Photo (2021)
The Great Hall of Glencairn Museum & north wall lancet windows

With a glittering mosaic tableau surrounding its grand archway and nine stained-glass lancet windows, the Great Hall evokes a sense of both temporal and spiritual grandeur.



 

Ed Voves, Photo (2021) 
The grand archway of Glencairn's Great Hall.The detail shows the school seal of the Academy of the New Church.
                      
The three sets of stained glass lancet windows are the most astonishing feature of Glencairn's Great Hall. As mentioned earlier, the Pitcairn family fortune was largely based on the annual profits of the Pittsburgh Plate Glass Company. Window-making was in Raymond Pitcairn's blood and he was determined to create stained glass windows which matched the standards of medieval glass-making. 

It was no easy task. Craftsman and art historians had tried for decades during the 1800's to unlock the secrets of the master glass makers and window painters of the Middle Ages. In 1921, Pitcairn bought 23 panels of medieval stained glass at auction in New York City so that he could study them at close hand. A year later, he established his own stained glass factory, recruiting expert glass makers from the U.S., Canada and Europe to produce stained glass windows for Bryn Athyn Cathedral and then for Glencairn. The factory remained in operation until 1943. 



 Ed Voves, Photo (2020)                
The east wall lancet windows of the Great Hall of Glencairn Museum.

Pitcairn eventually amassed over 260 panels of medieval stained glass. These set the standard for the painstaking research and experimentation which Pitcairn and his team devoted to their efforts. Some of these medieval panels were mounted in the three lancet windows on the east side of Glencairn's Great Hall. These make for an interesting comparison with the other six lancet windows, created at Pitcairn's factory and mounted on the north and west walls of Glencairn. Except for some shades of dark blues and deep violets, Pitcairn's team achieved striking success in matching the color tones and artistry of actual medieval stained glass.

In the case of the other six lancet windows, placed on the north and west walls of the Great Hall, four exactly match the configurations of windows at Chartres Cathedral. However, the central window of each trio mixes other designs from Chartres to create images which Pitcairn believed to be more appropriate for Glencairn. For instance, at Chartres, one of the central windows depicts St. Anne, mother of Mary, the mother of Jesus. Pitcairn, however, replaced St. Anne with Mary in her familiar role as Madonna, placing this image in the center of the west wall lancets at Glencairn.



          Ed Voves, Photo (2021)                
The west wall lancet windows of the Great Hall of Glencairn Museum.

Most art lovers, examining Pitcairn's reworking of medieval themes and fusing elements of Romanesque with early Gothic, would find nothing at Glencairn to complain about except a "crick" in the neck from constantly looking upward. However, Pitcairn's "mix-and-match" approach is open to criticism. Historians and art scholars expend a great deal of effort establishing chronologies and patterns of stylistic influence. Pitcairn's "re-imagining" of the Middle Ages might be held to undermine legitimate scholarship.  

In fact, I feel that it has the opposite  -and very stimulating - effect. An interesting example of "re-imagining" can be studied in the way that Pitcairn placed wooden sculptures from the Middle Ages on the railings of the balcony directly beneath the lancet windows.



             Ed Voves, Photo (2021)                
      Gallery view of the the balcony & north wall lancet windows                of the Great Hall of Glencairn Museum.

These statues, several of which retain traces of the original paint, were not deployed to  show a time-line progression of the development of medieval sculpture. Instead, they relate to the stained glass narratives above. A gilded carving of a king is placed below the gleaming image of King Solomon and a statue of the Virgin Mary and Christ child directs our attention to a nearby painting of the same subject.



Ed Voves, Photo (2021) 
Gothic-era angel sculpture with depiction of the death of King Saul

What struck me was the way that seemingly dissimilar statues and stained glass images could promote thought-provoking dialogue. 

That was readily apparent when I looked at a youthful Gothic-style angel, gazing out over the Great Hall, while, behind him, the wicked King Saul falls on his own sword. The stained glass image directly above Saul on this lancet window is King David, a powerful, mature figure. To me the pensive angel recalls the young David, singer of Psalms who had aroused the envy of King Saul, placing them on a collision course which would lead to Saul's death and David's elevation to kingship.

That is how this brilliant juxtaposition struck me and, I am guessing, Raymond Pitcairn thought so too. But, even if my speculation is incorrect in this instance, the unconventional way that Pitcairn displayed his works of art certainly provides much "food for thought."



                                      Ed Voves, Photo (2021)                                        Detail of Ecce Homo ("Behold the Man"), Late 15th/16th century

Medieval works of art were Pitcairn's favorite, but he collected widely in order that the range of world religion could be represented at Glencairn. Art from Ancient Egypt, Asian religions, the Classical world of Greece and Rome and Native American cultures are core areas of the Glencairn collection..

Like most museums, Glencairn has faced challenges due to the Covid-19 pandemic. Much of the collection remains closed to general, self-guided viewing. Currently, there are a limited number of guided tours and, hopefully as Covid-19 restrictions are eased, more access to this remarkable institution will be made available.



                 Ed Voves, Photo (2021)                
      Stained glass depiction of the "Woman Clothed with the Sun" from the Book of Revelations, appearing above the west wall windows 

But, in truth, the art works now on view in the Great Hall and several adjacent first-floor galleries are more that sufficient for making a visit to Glencairn a truly memorable occasion. The "dialogue" between these treasures from the Middle Ages and the radiant stained glass windows above opens a portal to this Age of Faith - and to spiritual grace within our own hearts and souls.



                      Ed Voves, Photo (2021)                
      Detail of William Blake's engraving of the Canterbury Pilgrims
 
To say that I was profoundly moved by sharing in Raymond Pitcairn's vision of the Middle Ages is an understatement. Like the protagonists in Chaucer's Canterbury Tales, my journey to Glencairn gained a special resonance. What began as a day trip took on the character of a pilgrimage.

***

Text: Copyright of Ed Voves, all rights reserved. Panoramic view of Glencairn Museum and the Cairnwoord estate, copyright of the Glencairn Museum.
                                                                                           
Introductory Image:                                                  
Ed Voves, Photo (2021) Glencairn Museum, Bryn Athyn, PA.

Panoramic view of Glencairn Museum and the Cairnwoord estate, copyright of the Glencairn Museum.

Ed Voves, Photo (2021) Balcony statue & north wall lancet window depicting King Solomon (above) and King Jeroboam, the Great Hall of Glencairn Museum.

Ed Voves, Photo (2021) Bryn Athyn Cathedral.

Unknown photographer. Raymond Pitcairn examines an early plaster model of Glencairn, c. 1930. The Raymond and Mildred Pitcairn Papers, Glencairn Museum,  RMP_GLEN_0001. Copyright Glencairn Museum

Ed Voves, Photo (2021) Glencairn Museum, Bryn Athyn, PA.
 
Ed Voves, Photo (2021) The Great Hall of Glencairn Museum and the lancet windows on the north wall. From left: King David, Angel with Censer, King Solomon.

Ed Voves, Photo (2021) The grand archway of Glencairn's Great Hall. The detail shows the school seal of the Academy of the New Church.

Ed Voves, Photo (2021) The east wall lancet windows of the Great Hall of Glencairn Museum.

Ed Voves, Photo (2021) The west wall lancet windows of the Great Hall of Glencairn Museum.

Ed Voves, Photo (2021) Gallery view of the the balcony & north wall lancet windows of the Great Hall of Glencairn Museum.

Ed Voves, Photo (2021) Gothic-era angel sculpture with depiction of the death of King Saul on a north wall lancet window at the Glencairn Museum's Great Hall.

Ed Voves, Photo (2021) Detail of Ecce Homo ("Behold the Man"), Late 15th/16th century, France, Champagne (?) Stone with polychromy: H. 36 1/4, W. 11, D. 8 1/2 in. (92.1 x 27.9 x 21.5 cm) Glencairn Museum collection. # 09.SP.86

Ed Voves, Photo (2021) Stained glass depiction of the "Woman Clothed with the Sun" from the Book of Revelations, appearing above the west wall lancet windows.

Ed Voves, Photo (2021)  Detail of William Blake's engraving of the Canterbury Pilgrims. Copper engraving, third state, 1810–20.






 

Tuesday, December 10, 2019

Art Eyewitness Book Review: The Wyvern Collection: Medieval and Later Ivory Carvings and Small Sculpture


The Wyvern Collection: 

Medieval and Later Ivory Carvings and Small Sculpture


By Paul Williamson
Thames & Hudson/$95/448 pages 

Reviewed by Ed Voves

During the Middle Ages, artists working on masterpieces of religious art utilized the most precious of materials to create sacred objects. Not merely beautiful, these works of art were holy treasures. Crafted by human hands, they were inspired by God.

Gold, silver, gem stones, rock crystal, expensive paint pigments made by grinding semi-precious minerals, silk imported over vast distances from Constantinople and points east. These were the "raw" materials of Ars Sacra.

There was one other highly-valued substance to which medieval craftsmen - and their patrons - devoted much attention. Rare, often unattainable, this artistic medium was mentioned in the Bible, along with gold and jewels, has having been lavished by King Solomon on his palace in Jerusalem: ivory.

An authoritative - and breathtakingly beautiful  - book has recently been published by Thames & Hudson which recounts the story of this intricate and exacting art form. 

Medieval and Later Ivory Carvings and Small Sculpture includes a number of works of art made from other precious materials, mother-of-pearl, amber, red porphry. These chapters, fascinating to be sure, are sidebars to the main theme, the painstaking carving of elephant and walrus tusks to create ivory devotional objects of astonishing beauty. 
       
Today, at least in the Western world, the idea of using ivory from elephant tusks to create a work of art sparks outrage and horror. During the Middle Ages, ivory was often difficult to procure but it was not because elephants were facing extinction. It was simply a matter that nothing was too precious that it should not be used to honor God.




Head of a Crozier with the Coronation of the Virgin, mid-14th century
 © 2019 The Wyvern Collection 
           
The use of rare and costly materials to create works of sacred art underscores the word "use." These ivory carvings were intended to be used.They were not created as status symbols for their owners, either religious institutions like monasteries or wealthy nobles and merchants. Often times, possessing a table-top ivory triptych did serve to confirm the elite status of the owner (if only in their minds) but devotional use was paramount. 

One of the key figures of Western cultural history, Abbot Suger (1081-1151) commented on the importance of ivory religious art, celebrating an especially notable example, "admirable for the most subtle and in our time unattainable carving of its ivory plaques, which exceeded human valuation in the representation of ancient histories."

The object of Suger's praise was the pulpit of the church at the monastery of St. Denis, one of the holiest shrines in France. Most of the ivory art works in the Thames & Hudson book were made for humbler settings.



Diptych with the Virgin and Child and the Crucifixion, c. 1320.
© 2019 The Wyvern Collection

There was an upsurge of piety in Western Europe, following 1000 A.D., with an emphasis on private devotion. It continued into the High Middle Ages, as can be seen above in the Diptych with the Virgin and Child and the Crucifixion, made in the Rhineland, around 1320. The carved figures are set in shallow boxes joined by two hinges. Opened at prayer or reflection times, closed during the rest of the day, this diptych transformed a monk's cell or a nobleman's bedroom into a chapel.



Anne Lloyd Photo (2019)
A view of Romanesque and early Gothic art at the Metropolitan Museum of Art

Many of the great museums of Europe and the United States have impressive collections of medieval ivory art works. The Metropolitan Museum of Art has over two hundred, at its main building and at the fabulous Cloisters located at Fort Tryon Park on the northern tip of Manhattan. The collection of the Walters Museum in Baltimore is even more impressive with over seven hundred medieval "ivories." 

You will not find one ivory work of art from the Met or the Walters - or from an other museum - in the Thames & Hudson volume. The magnificent works of art in the book all belong to a private collection, the Wyvern Collection. Sensibly, the owner has kept his (or her) identity private, as well as the location of these wonderful works of art.

Medieval and Later Ivory Carvings and Small Sculpture is the second Thames and Hudson book to study the Wyvern Collection. The first volume, published in 2018, surveyed sculptures made from wood, stone and metalwork.

The origins of European Ivories can be traced to secular artifacts, like the hilts of Viking swords which often had grips carved from Walrus tusks or the antlers of reindeer. Game pieces like the celebrated Lewis Chessmen of the British Museum were made from walrus ivory. There are a number of delightful game pieces in the Wyvern collection but its most magnificent secular work, carved from ivory, is surely the hunting horn or oliphant shown below.



Oliphant with hunting scenes and wild animals, late 11th or early 12th century
© 2019 The Wyvern Collection

This oliphant is believed to have made in southern Italy during the late eleventh century. 
During this period, the Normans, Vikings on horseback, were aggressively establishing feudal states in Italy and Sicily. One of the most extraordinary sagas in medieval history, the story of the Normans in Italy was memorably recounted by the great historian, John Julius Norwich in his books, The Other Conquest and The Kingdom in the Sun.

The hunting motifs on this horn, however, show cultural signs of the political power which the Normans sought to overturn. As the astute commentary in the Thames & Hudson book notes, "the figure style reveals a Byzantine sensibility transformed into a Western idiom, a mixture commonly found in south Italian Romanesque sculpture."

Artists of the Eastern Roman or Byzantine Empire had long upheld the ancient craft of ivory carving. Much of the religious imagery of Christianity in Western Europe can be traced to presentation pieces sent by the emperors of Byzantium to the rulers of the rising kingdoms of Western Europe. Along with the finished art works from Constantinople came the raw material itself, elephant tusks from East Africa.

It is a noteworthy that the ivory used during the late Middle Ages came from the tusks of wild elephants from East Africa, rather than from the Indian subcontinent. The tusks of African elephants are longer than those from India. Both male and female African elephants grow tusks. The trade in elephant tusks from Africa to Constantinople and later to Italy came via Islamic states and was frequently interrupted by war.

At such times, artists in Europe reworked existing pieces of ivory, some made hundreds of years previously, or carved small plaques, to conserve ivory. These were then incorporated into larger works, such as this reliquary triptych from Siena, dating to 1370.


Bartolo di Fredi, Reliquary triptych with plaques of the Adoration of the Magi and the Crucifixion, c.1370. © 2019 The Wyvern Collection

The carved plaques depict the Adoration of the Magi and the Crucifixion. The painted scene shows the Annunciation, created by Bartolo di Fredi (c.1330–1410). Above the ivory plaques is the portrait of a saint, likely one of the patrons of Siena, St. Ansanus. In a particularly moving touch, God the Father, painted all in sacred blue, hovers over the head of the Angel Gabriel. Thirteen round holes once held relics of Christian saints.

This deeply moving work of art and piety is made all the more incredible by considering its small size. When open, the triptych measures, approximately 14 inches high by 15 inches in width. The ivory plaques are even more astonishing, each measuring a mere 4 inches in height by 2 1/2 inches wide.

The story of this small wonder does not end with its diminutive size or the artistic skill which went into its creation.  Created around 1370, the triptych dates to the years following the Black Death. A world-wide pandemic, Bubonic plague reached Europe from the Mongol domains in 1347. The Black Death is believed to have killed over a third of the continent's population. Siena, the rival city to Florence in Tuscany, was especially hard-hit, with half of its citizenry perishing.

Tom Holland, in his new history of Christianity, Dominion, notes that an ancient statue of Venus had been unearthed in Siena shortly before the outbreak of the plague. The rediscovery and appreciation of ancient art was just beginning in Italy and the town fathers of Siena decided to display the nude Venus in the town square. With the coming of the Black Death, the hunt for scapegoats commenced. The "shameless" Venus was targeted for blame and smashed to bits.  

The surviving people of Siena were lectured to forget about Venus and cherish the special role of the Virgin Mary in Christian doctrine. This post-Black Death reliquary triptych is thus a reminder of a terrible period of human history. It also highlights the human capacity to find spiritual meaning and new visions of beauty even in the most appalling of circumstances.



Central panel of a tabernacle polyptych with the Virgin and Child, c. 1250–60 
 © 2019 The Wyvern Collection

The role, some might say "cult," of the Virgin Mary in late medieval Christianity is a complex issue. Tom Holland, in Dominion, treats it masterfully and I plan to review his book in the new year. 

In an earlier post, I reflected on the Byzantine roots of the Virgin Mary's place in art, as well as religion. The later Middle Ages is no less fascinating as we can see in this ivory masterpiece.

The Central panel of a tabernacle polyptych with the Virgin and Child (above) was likely made in the north of France, around 1250–60. The Virgin and Christ Child shelter in an edifice which mimics the design of the great cathedrals like Chartres and Notre Dame in Paris. These soaring places of sanctity thrill the eye but it is the worship of believing Christians taking place there which make these cathedrals holy places.

The pose of the Virgin and Child in the above work of art re-appears throughout this wonderful Thames & Hudson book. Amidst the Black Death, the Hundred Years War and countless other human-contrived horrors, people of faith created and cherished the works of art in the Wyvern Collection as testaments of their religious belief.

Art lovers today should be grateful to the Wyvern Collection's owner for preserving these ivory works of art. A "shout-out" should also go the author of the accompanying text, Paul Williamson, and to Thames & Hudson for publishing this beautiful volume and its predecessor.

Hopefully, further volumes are in the works and, better still, an exhibition will be organized to present some of the Wyvern Collection treasures to the appreciative gaze of people of faith today.

***
Text: Copyright of Ed Voves, all rights reserved                                                                Images courtesy of the  Wyvern Collection and Thames & Hudson Publishers 

Introductory Image:
Book Cover of The Wyvern Collection: Medieval and Later Ivory Carvings and Small

Sculpture. Courtesy Thames & Hudson
Head of a crozier with the Coronation of the Virgin. Probably north Italian, mid-14th century. Elephant ivory; h. 32.1 cm (incl. knop), 24.5 cm (not incl. knop and
leaf crockets), w. 10.7 cm (volute only) No. 0817 © 2019 The Wyvern Collection

Diptych with the Virgin and Child and the Crucifixion. Lower Rhenish (Cologne), c. 1320. Elephant ivory and wood (probably maple or walnut), painted and gilded; h. 20.6 cm, w. 27 cm (open) No. 0572 © 2019 The Wyvern Collection

Anne Lloyd Photo (2019) A view of Romanesque and early Gothic art at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.


Oliphant with hunting scenes and wild animals. Probably south Italian, late 11th or early 12th century. Elephant ivory; l. 60.2 cm, diam. 12.9 cm (at bell) No. 0580 © 2019 The Wyvern Collection

Reliquary triptych with plaques of the Adoration of the Magi and the Crucifixion
Painted by Bartolo di Fredi (c. 1330–1410) Tuscan (Siena), c. 1370 (triptych); French, c. 1350–70 (ivory plaques). Tempera and gold leaf on wood, elephant ivory, painted; h. 35.5 cm, w. 38.5 cm (open), 18.9 cm (closed), 23.6 cm (at base) No. 0442 © 2019 The Wyvern Collection

Central panel of a tabernacle polyptych with the Virgin and Child. Probably northern French, c. 1250–60. Elephant ivory, with traces of paint and gilding; h. 18 cm, w. 5.3 cm, d. 4 cm No. 1018  © 2019 The Wyvern Collection