The Colours of medieval English Alabaster Panels. Polychromy, production and perception
SCHLICHT, Markus
Ausonius-Institut de recherche sur l'Antiquité et le Moyen âge
LabEx Sciences archéologiques de Bordeaux [LASCARBX]
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Ausonius-Institut de recherche sur l'Antiquité et le Moyen âge
LabEx Sciences archéologiques de Bordeaux [LASCARBX]
SCHLICHT, Markus
Ausonius-Institut de recherche sur l'Antiquité et le Moyen âge
LabEx Sciences archéologiques de Bordeaux [LASCARBX]
< Réduire
Ausonius-Institut de recherche sur l'Antiquité et le Moyen âge
LabEx Sciences archéologiques de Bordeaux [LASCARBX]
Langue
en
Ouvrage
Ce document a été publié dans
2023-02-04
un@éditions
Résumé
Cet ouvrage a été réalisé pour Ausonius Éditions par UN@ Éditions, plateforme régionale d'édition universitaire numérique en libre accès. Between c. 1350 and 1550, English sculptors carved thousands of panels depicting ...Lire la suite >
Cet ouvrage a été réalisé pour Ausonius Éditions par UN@ Éditions, plateforme régionale d'édition universitaire numérique en libre accès. Between c. 1350 and 1550, English sculptors carved thousands of panels depicting religious scenes from alabaster quarries around Nottingham. Exported throughout Europe, these polychrome reliefs were originally often assembled to form altarpieces. Their coloured epidermis, an integral part of these artworks, has now often disappeared. A multidisciplinary team (art historian, archaeologist, artist specializing in ancient polychromies, 3D engineers and optodigital researcher) has analyzed and reconstructed the polychromy of several of these English panels preserved in the Bordeaux region. The physico-chemical analyses permitted to determine the nature of the materials employed and to recreate the paints used by the alabastermen. These data served to produce an alabaster facsimile as well as three 3D models with their digital polychromy. As the polychromy of English alabasters is highly standardized, these examples can be considered representative of the aspect that the vast majority of the panels must have shown. The study thus allows us to address broader themes, such as the aesthetic and symbolic qualities of the colours used by the alabastermen, or the way in which the polychromy was preceived by the medieval viewer.< Réduire
Mots clés en anglais
Alabaster
Polychromy
Reconstruction
Middle Ages
Religion
Iconography
Colour
Nottingham
Origine
Importé de halUnités de recherche