Gothic Sculpture

Superficially considered, it would seem that Gothic art developed naturally out of the Roman-esque style. While it is true to say that Romanesque flourished during the eleventh and the first half of the twelfth century, the style had many regional variations, and in some areas (especially in the south of France and Italy where antique Roman prototypes were plentiful) it lingered longer than in others.

Early manifestations of what was to become the Gothic style emerged in what is known as the Ile de France, where Paris, Reims, Amiens, Chartres, Soissons, Sens and Noyon are situated. In all these centres important developments took place in architecture which set the tone for the Gothic. The standard of education at the universities, monasteries and cathedral schools also improved and was reflected in painting, sculpture and the minor arts.

The Gothic cathedral forms a great, carefully calculated programme. Each carved figure and narrative scene in the porches has a meaning. Not all the meanings are clear to us today (and even in the Middle Ages only the well-educated could grasp all the implications), but the overall scheme, based on a total concept of life is clear to us.

All the sculptures of a Gothic portal are related to each other. Nothing is accidental or capricious as it sometimes is in a Romanesque cloister or crypt. If the doors are open so that you can look into the building from the portal you will notice that the windows you can see in the opposite transept wall correspond to the sculptures outside. Thus Saint Anne, one of the immediate forebears of Christ, is depicted in the lancet at Chartres and corresponds in placing in the north wall to the Beau Dieu on the trumeau in the south portal. The Saint Anne, mother of the Virgin Mary, is flanked by four majestic depictions of Old Testament figures: Melchizedek, King David, King Solomon and Aaron, each standing above a panel in which is a conquered figure. So
Melchizedek is above Nebuchadnezzar, David above Saul, whose heart has been pierced by his own sword. Solomon is above Jeroboam and Aaron above a pharaoh.

The subject matter found in Gothic art is mainly derived from the Bible, the Apocryphal works, the commentaries of the Fathers, and ancient legends such as Jacobus de Voragine’s Golden Legend. The cult of the Virgin also flourished. As her life is seldom discussed in the Scriptures, scenes from her childhood, her wedding, death and Assumption are derived from Apocryphal sources. The left tympanum of the Royal Portal at Chartres shows her ascent into heaven. The central portal of the North transept at Chartres depicts her coronation. She is also frequently shown in Annunciation and Visitation scenes.

In Romanesque sculpture Christ in Majesty and the Last Judgement were portrayed separate-ly (for example at Moissac and Autun, respectively). Towards the end of the twelfth century the Christ in Majesty (Majestas Domtini), surrounded by the Four Beasts of the Apocalypse virtually
disappears. In the centre portal of the South transept at Chartres Cathedral the Last Judgement is portrayed in a manner which radically differs from previous depictions.

Symbolism and allegory are an integral part of medieval art. Male writes:

“From the days of the catacombs, Christian art has spoken in figures, showing men one thing and inviting them to see in it the figure of another.”

Stolen Juan Gris painting recovered by FBI

A sting operation in Florida ends a six-year case that started with a break-in at a private home in St Louis, Missouri

A dramatic six-year-long case of a stolen art work is nearing its end following an FBI sting operation. The FBI has announced that a Juan Gris painting, stolen in 2004, has been recovered in Florida and a suspect, Robert Dibartolo, has been charged with transportation of the stolen art work.

According to the criminal complaint and affidavit cited by the FBI and the United States Attorney for the Southern District of Florida, the painting was taken by unknown thieves who forcibly broke into the home of Clifton Hyatt in Saint Louis, Missouri in 2004. The Juan Gris untitled canvas, a 1926 cubist impressionist still-life valued at around $1 million, was hanging in the front entryway of the house.

The FBI started investigating the case and then finally in November 2009, Dibartolo spoke to an undercover agent about selling the painting, according to court documents. Just last week, on 11 March, the defendant met with the agent at a hotel in Jupiter, Florida and produced the Gris, wrapped in a blue packing blanket. After the undercover agent determined that the painting was authentic, Dibartolo was taken into custody, and the painting was later identified by its original owner.

The Palm Beach Post reports that the owner, Clifton Hyatt, bought the painting in the mid-1960s from a “striking” Russian woman he met and had a relationship with in Spain, where he was enlisted with the US Air Force. During visits to her home, Hyatt admired the abstract painting but didn’t know anything about the artist. When he left the country, she agreed to sell him the work at what would turn out to be a generous discount. “I didn’t know Juan Gris from Juan Pepe,” he told the Post. “I just rolled the damned thing up and mailed it” to St Louis. A US museum later authenticated the painting as an authentic work by Spanish cubist Juan Gris, a contemporary of Picasso and Braque.

The FBI will retain the painting until the case has been resolved. Hyatt told the Post he then plans to keep the painting in his home, “along with two Rottweilers and a shotgun”.

The case is being prosecuted by Assistant US Attorney Lothrop Morris and if convicted, Dibartolo faces up to 10 years in prison.