Claustro

ca. 1130–40
On view at The Met Cloisters in Gallery 07
Os claustros têm uma função de vital importância na vida monástica. São essencialmente passagens cobertas ao redor de um pátio aberto e servem de espaço para a meditação, a leitura em voz alta e as abluções diárias. Também conectam a igreja a outros edifícios usados pelos monges. A beleza cálida do mármore rosado local é o denominador comum dos vários capitéis deste claustro, que apresentam desde formas geométricas simples até esculturas ornamentais com leões, bestas, sereias e pergaminhos vegetais. Alguns capitéis ilustram fábulas ou simbolizam a luta entre o bem e o mal. Seja qual for o tema iconográfico, os escultores de Cuxá se deleitaram em plasmar formas com energia tensa. Após nove séculos, muitas das esculturas de Saint-Michel-de-Cuxá foram dispersadas durante a Revolução Francesa. O claustro original, provavelmente construído durante o período do Abade Gregório (1130–1146), tinha quase duas vezes o tamanho desta reconstrução.

Artwork Details

Object Information
  • Título: Claustro
  • Data: ca. 1130–40
  • Geografia: Procedente do monastério beneditino de Saint-Michel-de-Cuxá, próximo de Perpignan, França
  • Cultura: Catalão
  • Meio: Mármore
  • Dimensões: 27,4 x 23,8 m
  • Linha de créditos: Coleção Os Claustros, 1925
  • Número de acesso: 25.120.398–.954
  • Curatorial Department: Medieval Art and The Cloisters

Audio

Disponível apenas em: English
Cover Image for Cuxa Cloister

Cuxa Cloister

Gallery 7

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NARRATOR: In this spot, you may feel like you’ve stepped back in time. Or that the middle ages have been brought back to life – in spring and summer, the garden beyond the columns is vibrant with flowers and the scent of lavender. Of course, this is just the effect that the founders of the Cloisters intended.

This is a cloister, an open courtyard, with covered walkways around the sides and a garden in the center. Every monastery had a structure like this, though there was considerable variety in size – the columns here actually come from a cloister nearly twice as large as this one. That cloister was built in the early twelfth century at a place called Cuxa in the Pyrenees Mountains, near the border between France and Spain.

Look at the capitals, or tops, of these columns. Some have clean and simple forms, but others have decoration that you may find surprising; you’ll see figures in antic, spread-legged poses, fantastic animals, and figures with human heads that end in snaky coils. *

These carved elements are all medieval, but the low wall beneath and some of the arches above are reconstructions - there are diagrams at the corners of the cloister to show you which is which. Elsewhere in the museum, it's easy to tell the difference, but here the stone is all the same. It has a distinctive color, a warm pink streaked with white, and it comes from a quarry near Cuxa. The quarry was reopened in the early twentieth century, and new stone was cut to make a full cloister for the medieval elements.

The cloister was the heart of every monastery; it connected the places where the monks or nuns carried out their daily routine. The Cuxa cloister fills a similar place here at the museum, connecting the gallery spaces on this level.

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