Doorway, Heckingham Church

John Sell Cotman British

Not on view

Cotman drew the south doorway at St. Gregory’s, a twelfth-century church at Heckingham, in Norfolk, while living in Great Yarmouth. By 1818 he had made two visits to Normandy to study the region’s medieval architecture. These encounters encouraged his attention to the fine Norman stonework closer to home, in this case on a small building ten miles southeast of Norwich. He used watercolor over graphite to describe four orders of shafts with cushion capitals; arches decorated with zigzags, reels, and bobbins and wheels. The open door reveals a square-bowled Norman baptismal font within, supported by squat columns and topped with a wooden cover. A patch of blue sky can be glimpsed through a diamond-paned, early Gothic lancet window.

Doorway, Heckingham Church, John Sell Cotman (British, Norwich 1782–1842 London), Graphite and watercolor

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