Masons Of God
Feb. 10th, 2011 12:57 pmI enjoyed this. I particularly liked the reconstruction of the West Front of Wells Cathedral as it was before all the paint washed off. Has there ever been a movie set in the Middle Ages that faithfully reflected the medieval delight in colour?
Did we really lose 90% of our medieval sculpture at the Reformation? Who comes up with these figures anyway? When I'm out trundling round churches I'm always astonished by just how much survives. Consider Wells: the statues on the west front are mostly still there- the only casualties having been caused- not by starchy chaps with hammers- but by wind and weather. Go into any moderately well preserved medieval church and the higher you look, the more sculpture there is to see- Reformers and Puritans baulked at climbing ladders I think- and very sensible of them too. But, perhaps I'm in denial. It hurts to think of so much beauty being wantonly destroyed.
Did we really lose 90% of our medieval sculpture at the Reformation? Who comes up with these figures anyway? When I'm out trundling round churches I'm always astonished by just how much survives. Consider Wells: the statues on the west front are mostly still there- the only casualties having been caused- not by starchy chaps with hammers- but by wind and weather. Go into any moderately well preserved medieval church and the higher you look, the more sculpture there is to see- Reformers and Puritans baulked at climbing ladders I think- and very sensible of them too. But, perhaps I'm in denial. It hurts to think of so much beauty being wantonly destroyed.
no subject
Date: 2011-02-10 08:14 pm (UTC)But we still have loads of misericords and tomb effigies and roof bosses and gargoyles.
I concede that Scotland is a lot worse off.
no subject
Date: 2011-02-10 08:22 pm (UTC)We've lost even our roof bosses and our capitals. And if you think of what's survived at an abbey of the size of Fountains, and compare that with what must have been there originally, it makes you want to weep.
no subject
Date: 2011-02-10 10:01 pm (UTC)