Gothic revival
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In England, some discrete Gothic details appeared on new
construction at Oxford and Cambridge in the late 17th century, and
at the archbishop of Canterbury's residence Lambeth Palace, a Gothic
hammerbeam roof was built in 1663 to replace a building that had
been sacked during the English Civil War. It is not easy to decide
whether these instances were Gothic survival or early appearances of
Gothic revival.
In England in the mid-18th century, the Gothic style was more widely
revived, first as a decorative, whimsical alternative to Rococo that
is still conventionally termed 'Gothick', of which Horace Walpole's
Twickenham villa "Strawberry Hill" is the familiar example. Then,
especially after the 1830s, Gothic was treated more seriously in a
series of Gothic revivals (sometimes termed Victorian Gothic or
Neo-Gothic). The Houses of Parliament in London are an example of
this Gothic revival style, designed by Sir Charles Barry and a major
exponent of the early Gothic Revival, Augustus Pugin. Another
example is the main building of the University of Glasgow designed
by Sir George Gilbert Scott. |
.In France, the towering figure of the Gothic Revival was Eugène
Viollet-le-Duc, who outdid historical Gothic constructions to create
a Gothic as it ought to have been, notably at the fortified city of
Carcassonne in the south of France and in some richly fortified
keeps for industrial magnates (illustration, left). Viollet-le-Duc
compiled and coordinated an Encyclopédie médiévale that was a rich
repertory his contemporaries mined for architectural details but
also include armor, costume, tools, furniture, weapons and the like.
He effected vigorous restoration of crumbling detail of French
cathedrals, famously at Notre Dame, many of whose most "Gothic"
gargoyles are Viollet-le-Duc's. But he also taught a generation of
reform-Gothic designers and showed how to apply Gothic style to
thoroughly modern structural materials, especially cast iron.
The Gothic Revival was an architectural movement which originated in
mid-18th century England. In the 19th century, increasingly serious
and learned neo-Gothic styles sought to revive medieval forms, in
distinction to the classical styles which were prevalent at the
time. The movement had significant influence throughout the United
Kingdom as well as in Europe and North America, and perhaps more
Gothic architecture was built in both the 19th century and 20th
century than had originally ever been built.
In literature, the architectural Gothic Revival and classical
Romanticism gave rise to the Gothic novel genre, beginning with
Castle of Otranto (1764) by Horace Walpole, 4th Earl of Orford, and
inspired a 19th century genre of medieval poetry which stems from
the pseudo-bardic poetry of "Ossian." Poems like "Idylls of the
King" by Alfred Tennyson, 1st Baron Tennyson recast specifically
modern themes in medieval settings of Arthurian romance.
Gothic architecture did not die out completely in the 15th century,
but instead lingered on in on-going cathedral-building projects and
the construction of churches in increasingly isolated rural
districts of England, France, Spain and Germany. In Bologna, in
1646, the Baroque architect Carlo Rainaldi constructed Gothic vaults
(completed 1658) for the Basilica of San Petronio which had been
under construction since 1390; there, the Gothic context of the
structure overrode considerations of the current architectural mode.
Similarly, Gothic architecture survived in an urban setting during
the later 17th century, as shown in Oxford and Cambridge, where some
additions and repairs to Gothic buildings were apparently considered
to be more in keeping with the style of the original structures than
contemporary Baroque. Sir Christopher Wren's Tom Tower for Christ
Church College, Oxford University, and, later, Nicholas Hawksmoor's
west towers of Westminster Abbey, blur the boundaries between what
is called "Gothic survival" and the Gothic revival.
In the mid 18th century, with the rise of Romanticism, an increased
interest and awareness of the Middle Ages among some influential
connoisseurs created a more appreciative approach to selected
medieval arts, beginning with church architecture, the tomb
monuments of royal and noble personnages, stained glass, and late
Gothic illuminated manuscripts. Other Gothic arts continued to be
disregarded as barbaric and crude, however: tapestries and
metalwork, as examples. Sentimental and nationalist associations
with historical figures were as strong in this early revival, as
purely aesthetic concerns. A few Britons, and soon some Germans,
began to appreciate the picturesque character of ruins—
"picturesque" becoming a new aesthetic quality— and those mellowing
effects of time that the Japanese call wabi-sabi and which Horace
Walpole independently admired, mildly tongue-in-cheek, as "the true
rust of the Barons' wars." The "Gothick" details of Walpole's
Twickenham villa, "Strawberry Hill," (illustrated, left) appealed to
the rococo tastes of the time, and by the 1770s, thoroughly
neoclassical architects such as Robert Adam and James Wyatt were
prepared to provide Gothic details in drawing-rooms, libraries, and
chapels, for a romantic vision of a Gothic abbey, Fonthill Abbey in
Wiltshire. Inveraray Castle, constructed from 1746 with design input
from William Adam, displays early revival of Gothic features in
Scotland. The "Gothick" style was an architectural manifestation of
the artificial "picturesque" seen elsewhere in the arts: these
ornamental temples and summer-houses ignored the structural logic of
true Gothic buildings and were effectively Palladian buildings with
pointed arches. The eccentric landscape designer Batty Langley even
attempted to "improve" Gothic forms by giving them classical
proportions.
A younger generation who took Gothic architecture more seriously
provided the readership for J. Britten's series of Cathedral
Antiquities, which began appearing in 1814. In 1817, Thomas Rickman
wrote an Attempt... to name and define the sequence of Gothic styles
in English ecclesiastical architecture, "a text-book for the
architectural student". Its long title is descriptive: Attempt to
discriminate the styles of English architecture from the Conquest to
the Reformation; preceded by a sketch of the Grecian and Roman
orders, with notices of nearly five hundred English buildings. The
categories he used were Norman, Early English, Decorated and
Perpendicular. It went through numerous editions and was still being
republished in 1881. |
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