An ornate gothic ivory panel of the Virgin Mary and the Crucifixion i Diptych of Saint Louis crowned by Christ and the Crucifixion, c. 1325-50), The Courtauld, London (Samuel Courtauld Trust) © The Courtauld

21 – Gothic Images: The Art of Magnificence, 1200-1500

NEW – Course 21

Dr Lydia Hansell

Summer School – Online
Monday 12 – Friday 16 July 2021
£395

You can still enroll on this course by 17:00 [London], Thursday 8 July. Please email short.courses@courtauld.ac.uk

Course description

In the twelfth century, a dazzling new style of art and architecture flourished in Europe. The Gothic aesthetic that Vasari memorably dismissed as “endless pinnacles” pervaded visual culture, from precious gem-encrusted reliquaries, ivories, and illuminated manuscripts, to the stained glass of cathedrals, panel paintings, murals and monumental sculpture. Works of art made in this period offer fascinating insights into the beliefs, priorities and even anxieties of their patrons and makers. Focusing primarily on art made in England, France and the Low Countries, this course will explore the making of images in the Gothic period and the multitude of ideas which shaped that often complex and almost always collaborative process. It will consider the intellectual, theological, philosophical, social and aesthetic ideas which scholars have credited as the driving forces behind the emergence of the Gothic style. A picture can gradually be built up of what might be called the “imaginative universe” which shaped Gothic art, and the different ways in which ideas were distilled into images, in an astonishingly rich visual language.

Lecturer’s biography

Dr Lydia Hansell received her undergraduate degree in Classics from the University of Oxford before completing an MA and AHRC-funded PhD at The Courtauld. Lydia’s PhD, supervised by Professor Susie Nash, focused on Burgundian ecclesiastic patronage. Her recent research will be published in conjunction with an exhibition to be held in Autun, Burgundy in summer 2021. Lydia is an Associate Lecturer at The Courtauld where she has taught and lectured on BA and MA courses on medieval and Renaissance Art.

An ornate gothic ivory panel of the Virgin Mary and the Crucifixion
Diptych of Saint Louis crowned by Christ and the Crucifixion, c. 1325-50), The Courtauld, London (Samuel Courtauld Trust) © The Courtauld

Citations