クロイスター

late 12th–early 13th century
On view at The Met Cloisters in Gallery 03
トゥールーズ伯とアキテーヌ候を兼ね、シャルルマーニュの宮廷に仕えたギレームは、804年に世俗的な特権を放棄し、モンペリエ郊外の険しい山の中にベネディクト会の修道院を設立しました。クロイスターの建築要素には古典時代の遺跡が数多く残るこの地域を反映して、古典様式の影響が多分に見られます。アカンサスの葉や曲がりくねった模様の彫刻などがその好例で、13世紀初頭の石造彫刻の典型的な様式を示しています。スペイン北西部のサンティアゴ・デ・コンポステーラへの巡礼路沿いにある修道院は、ユグノー戦争とフランス革命で多大な損傷を受けました。このクロイスターは、柱、付け柱、柱頭など、約140点の要素を使って修道院の回廊を再現したものです。

Artwork Details

Object Information
  • 題: クロイスター
  • 月日: 12世紀末–13世紀初頭
  • 地理: モンペリエ近くのベネディクト会サン・ギレーム・ル・デゼール修道院
  • 文化: フランス
  • 手法: 石灰岩
  • 寸法: 9.2 x 7.3 m
  • 提供者: クロイスターズ・コレクション、1925年
  • 受け入れ番号: 25.120.1–.134
  • Curatorial Department: Medieval Art and The Cloisters

Audio

以下でのみ利用可能: English
Cover Image for Saint-Guilhem Cloister

Saint-Guilhem Cloister

Gallery 3

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NARRATOR: The screen of columns in this room comes from a monastery in France called Saint-Guilhem-le-Désert. Turn to your left and walk along the row. You'll notice that the shafts of the columns take a variety of shapes: cylindrical, faceted, and wave-like. They offer a fine introduction to medieval sculpture. To see what I mean, continue through the arcade to the place where you can pass between the columns, and look at the pair immediately on the left. *

Look at the inverted bell shape that crowns these columns: it’s called a capital. The leaf decoration is just what you might find on an ancient Roman capital, carved a thousand years before these. But if you look above the leaves at the rectangular block, you'll find features without ancient precedent: the curling vine resembles a grapevine, but instead of grapes, there are human heads, each with its own hairstyle and facial expression. The twelfth-century sculptor responsible could have completed his commission without this level of inventiveness; and yet he produced this variety, it would seem, out of pure creativity. It's worth noting too that nature was his springboard: the capitals of many columns in this cloister show foliage of some kind. Most of the leaves and vines are not botanically recognizable, but one is: it's hops, the basic ingredient in beer, and an essential commodity in the medieval economy.

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