Cover image for Enamels of Limoges 1100-1350.
Enamels of Limoges 1100-1350.
Title:
Enamels of Limoges 1100-1350.
Author:
Gauthier, Marie-Madeleine.
ISBN:
9780870997587

9780870997594

9780810965003
Physical Description:
1 online resource (478 pages) : illustrations (some color) ; 29 cm.
General Note:
Issued in conjunction with the exhibition of the same name, held at the Mus©♭e du Louvre, Paris, Oct. 23, 1995 - Jan. 22, 1996, and at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Mar. 5 - June 16, 1996.

French edition published by R©♭union des Mus©♭es nationaux in 1995 under title: L'¿¿uvre de Limoges.

Exhibition title: Enamels of Limoges.
Contents:
Transatlantic Crossings of the Art of Limoges / The Limousin and Limoges in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries / Religious Life in the Limousin in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries / Beginnings and Evolution of the Oeuvre de Limoges / Opus lemovicense: The Taste for and Diffusion of Limousin Enamels / Techniques and Materials in Limoges Enamels / Catalogue -- The Birth of Enameling in Aquitaine (1100-1160) -- Opus lemovicense and the Creation of a European Taste (1160-1190) -- The Abbey of Grandmont (12th-13th century). Introduction / Limoges in Transition (1190-1230) -- The Last Flowering (1240-1320). Heraldy and Limoges / Gilded Images: Sacred and Funerary Sculpture (13th-14th century). Introduction / Appendixes: Tombs of Limoges Work / Appendixes: Techniques and Materials in Limoges Enamels
Abstract:
"Limoges enamels, the richest surviving corpus of medieval metalwork, were renowned throughout Europe in the Middle Ages. Yet today they are little known outside academic circles. The present volume, published in conjuction with the exhibition Enamels of Limoges, 1100-1350, brings to deserved public attention nearly two hundred of the most important and representative examples from the collections of The Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Musee du Louvre, the great church treasuries of France, and other sources." "The works of Limoges were created for important ecclesiastical and royal patrons. The wealth of enameling preserved from the Treasury of the abbey of Grandmont, just outside Limoges, is due chiefly to the Plantagenet patronage of Henry II and his queen, Eleanor of Aquitaine. Enamels created during their reign resonate with the elegant style of the court, and the dramatic history of Henry's monarchy is evoked by such works as the reliquary of Saint Thomas Becket. Ecclesiastical patrons such as Archbishop Absalon of Lund, Cardinal Guala Bicchieri, and, above all, Pope Innocent III were key to the dissemination of Limoges work throughout the churches of Europe." "While few of the artists who created the enamels that have come down to us are known by name, the works of several - Master Alpais, Garnerius, and Aymeric Chretien - are here juxtaposed with related pieces, some of them demonstrably from the same atelier."--BOOK JACKET.
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