Rainbow like an emerald : stained glass in Lorraine in the thirteenth and early fourteenth centuries

Bibliographic Information

Rainbow like an emerald : stained glass in Lorraine in the thirteenth and early fourteenth centuries

Meredith Parsons Lillich

(Monographs on the fine arts, 47)

Published for College Art Association by the Pennsylvania State University Press, 1991

Available at  / 6 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [109]-153) and indexes

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Rainbow Like an Emerald is the most comprehensive study of Lorraine stained glass as a regional style developed in conjunction with the typical Gothic architecture of the province. Situated between France and Germany, medieval Lorraine increasingly looked to France for it cultural standards. While French in inspiration, however, its Gothic architecture and stained glass quickly developed strong regional and distinctive characteristics. This architecture has only in the last decade been studied, and Lillich's work is the first serious analysis of the windows. Loraine has always been known as a glass-making center, and in the Gothic era it seems to have produced a range of handsome greens. However, the turbulent history of the region has left little glass from the period, and today no glass program survives in it entirety, while some, such as Metz, are now lost beyond retrieval. This book presents all the Gothic stained glass that remains in Lorraine: Toul Cathedral, Saint-Gengoult in Toul, the rural parish of Menillot (just outside of Toul), Saint-Die in the Vosges, the pilgrimage church of Avioth on the Belgian border, and the various groups now installed in Metz Cathedral, with appendixes dealing with fragments surviving at Sainte-Segolene in Metz, Ecrouves near Toul, and the Cistercian abbey of La Chalade. Though many patches of the puzzle remain-and will remain-blank, some of the outlines are strong and some of the precious detail still commands the power to astonish and delight us.

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