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The Cloisters Cross : its art and meaning / Elizabeth C. Parker and Charles T. Little.

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MetPublications Available online

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Parker, Elizabeth C., author.
Contributor:
Little, Charles T.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Cloisters (Museum).
Crosses--England.
Crosses.
Bury Saint Edmunds Cross.
Ivories, Romanesque--England.
Ivories, Romanesque.
Christian art and symbolism--England--Medieval, 500-1500.
Christian art and symbolism.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (316 pages, 16 color plates) : illustrations
Place of Publication:
New York : The Metropolitan Museum of Art : Distributed by Harry N. Abrams; c1994.
Biography/History:
Elizabeth C. Parker is Professor of Art History, Fordham University, New York.
Charles T. Little is Curator of Medieval Art, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.
Summary:
"The walrus-ivory Cloisters Cross, a masterpiece of English Romanesque art, has long been a centerpiece of the Metropolitan Museum of Art's Cloisters collection, a separate museum in Fort Tryon Park (New York City) devoted exclusively to the art of the Middle Ages. In fact, ever since its acquisition in 1963, the cross has been the subject of speculation and mystery. The dearth of solid information about its provenance prior to its ownership by a Yugoslav art dealer and restorer has generated a number of tantalizing theories as to its origin, function, and early history, although no one has denied the exceptional quality of its workmanship or the unparalleled complexity of its design." "The story of the cross's creation, survival, and meaning is explored in this fascinating book. Of special interest is the sheer number of figures that populate the compact scenes on both sides of the cross, and of biblical passages diligently inscribed on individual scrolls held by Old Testament prophets across its surface. The cross is a tour de force of sculptural artistry, which holds within its small physical scope an iconographic encyclopedia of learning almost unmatched in Medieval Art." "This comprehensive study is addressed to the genuinely curious visitor to the Cloisters collection, as well as to the specialized scholar. The authors have included a systematic description of the intricate construction of the cross and an analysis of every detail of its carving. They offer substantial new insights to the findings of previous scholarly research as to possible meanings and context, in terms of both the liturgy and the intellectual milieu of the twelfth century in which it has been placed. The attribution to the abbey of Bury St. Edmunds - the name by which the cross was first known - is discussed at length. In rich and exacting detail the authors reveal, as do the splendid new color photographs by Malcolm Varon, just how the Cloisters Cross, in its imagery and consummate workmanship, bears "witness to a level of erudition and artistry seldom seen in the twelfth century or later.""--BOOK JACKET.
This publication is an exploration of the many facets of the cross: its construction, its imagery and inscriptions, the context for its exceptional style and iconography, its theological setting, and its use in the liturgy as well as its place in English Romanesque art.-- Metropolitan Museum of Art website.
Contents:
Foreword / William D. Wixom
Ch. 1. Introduction: The Cross and Its History
Ch. 2. Word and Image: The Iconography of the Cross
Ch. 3. The Function of the Cloisters Cross
Ch. 4. The Liturgical Context
Ch. 5. The Intellectual Setting
Ch. 6. The Bury St. Edmunds Connection
Ch. 7. Epilogue: The Place of the Cross in English Romanesque Art
Appendix I: The Inscriptions on the Cross
Appendix II: The Olso Corpus.
Notes:
Also available as electronic reproduction. New York, N.Y. : Thomas J. Watson Library, 2013.
Also available as electronic reproduction. Plymouth Meeting, Pa. : codeMantra ; The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2012.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN:
0870996827
1872501907 (Harvey Miller Pulbishers)
0810964341 (Abrams)
OCLC:
28215488
Access Restriction:
Open Access Unrestricted online access

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