BYZANTINE ART AND ARCHITECTURE

works of art and structures works produced in the city of Byzantium after Constantine made it the capital of the Roman Empire (a.d. 330) and the work done under Byzantine influence, as in Venice, Ravenna, Norman Sicily, as well as in Syria, Greece, Russia, and other Eastern countries.

General History

For more than a thousand years, until the conquest of Constantinople by the Turks in 1453, Byzantine art retained a remarkably conservative orientation; the major phases of its development emerge from a background marked by adherence to classical principles. Artistic activity was temporarily disrupted by the Iconoclastic controversy (726–843), which resulted in the wholesale destruction of figurative works of art and the restriction of permissible content to ornamental forms or to symbols like the cross. The pillaging of Constantinople by the Frankish Crusaders in 1204 was perhaps a more serious blow; but it was followed by an impressive late flowering of Byzantine art under the Paleologus dynasty.

Byzantine Art

Mosaic

Byzantine achievements in mosaic decoration brought this art to an unprecedented level of monumentality and expressive power. Mosaics were applied to the domes, half-domes, and other available surfaces of Byzantine churches in an established hierarchical order. The center of the dome was reserved for the representation of the Pantocrator, or Jesus as the ruler of the universe, whereas other sacred personages occupied lower spaces in descending order of importance.

The entire church thus served as a tangible evocation of the celestial order; this conception was further enhanced by the stylized poses and gestures of the figures, their hieratic gaze, and the luminous shimmer of the gold backgrounds. Because of the destruction of many major monuments in Constantinople proper, large ensembles of mosaic decoration have survived chiefly outside the capital, in such places as Salonica, Nicaea, and Daphni in Greece and Ravenna in Italy.

Painting

An important aspect of Byzantine artistic activity was the painting of devotional panels, since the cult of icons played a leading part in both religious and secular life. Icon painting usually employed the encaustic technique. Little scope was afforded individuality; the effectiveness of the religious image as a vehicle of divine presence was held to depend on its fidelity to an established prototype. A large group of devotional images has been preserved in the monastery of St. Catherine on Mt. Sinai.

The development of Byzantine painting may also be seen in manuscript illumination. Among notable examples of Byzantine illumination are a lavishly illustrated 9th-century copy of the Homilies of Gregory Nazianzus and two works believed to date from a 10th-century revival of classicism, the Joshua Rotulus (or Roll) and the Paris Psalter.

Other Arts

Enamel, ivory, and metalwork objects of Byzantine workmanship were highly prized throughout the Middle Ages; many such works are found in the treasuries of Western churches. Most of these objects were reliquaries or devotional panels, although an important series of ivory caskets with pagan subjects has also been preserved. Byzantine silks, the manufacture of which was a state monopoly, were also eagerly sought and treasured as goods of utmost luxury.

Byzantine Architecture

The architecture of the Byzantine Empire was based on the great legacy of Roman formal and technical achievements. Constantinople had been purposely founded as the Christian counterpart and successor to the leadership of the old pagan city of Rome. The new capital was in close contact with the Hellenized East, and the contribution of Eastern culture, though sometimes overstressed, was an important element in the development of its architectural style. The 5th-century basilica of St. John of the Studion, the oldest surviving church in Constantinople, is an early example of Byzantine reliance upon traditional Roman models.

The most imposing achievement of Byzantine architecture is the Church of Holy Wisdom or Hagia Sophia. It was constructed in a short span of five years (532–37) during the reign of Justinian. Hagia Sophia is without a clear antecedent in the architecture of late antiquity, yet it must be accounted as culminating several centuries of experimentation toward the realization of a unified space of monumental dimensions. Throughout the history of Byzantine religious architecture, the centrally planned structure continued in favor. Such structures, which may show considerable variation in plan, have in common the predominance of a central domed space, flanked and partly sustained by smaller domes and half-domes spanning peripheral spaces.

Although many of the important buildings of Constantinople have been destroyed, impressive examples are still extant throughout the provinces and on the outer fringes of the empire, notably in Bulgaria, Russia, Armenia, and Sicily. A great Byzantine architectural achievement is the octagonal church of San Vitale (consecrated 547) in Ravenna. The church of St. Mark's in Venice was based on a Byzantine prototype, and Byzantine workmen were employed by Arab rulers in the Holy Land and in Ottonian Germany during the 11th cent.

Secular architecture in the Byzantine Empire has left fewer traces. Foremost among these are the ruins of the 5th-century walls of the city of Constantinople, consisting of an outer and an inner wall, each originally studded with 96 towers. Some of these can still be seen.

Bibliography

See A. van Millingen, Byzantine Churches in Constantinople (1912); D. T. Rice, Art of Byzantium (1959) and Art of the Byzantine Era (1963, repr. 1985); W. MacDonald, Early Christian and Byzantine Architecture (1963); I. Hutter, Early Christian and Byzantine Art (1988).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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...ROMANESQUE ARCHITECTURE IN WESTERN...1935. BYZANTINE ART . By D...region in the Byzantine sphere, and...Bulgaria an art, or at least an architecture, which was...Christian art of Mesopotamia...especially architecture, preserved...foreign to the Byzantine: see Guyer...
...GALLERY EARLY CHRISTIAN AND BYZANTINE ART THE BALTIMORE MUSEUM OF ART...extent of the Early Christian and Byzantine art to be found in American collections...such as was the exhibition of Byzantine Art held in Paris in 1931. The impetus...
...Aubert, who tells us that architecture dominates mediaeval art, and that the basic element...was distinctive of Gothic art that architecture led the way: all other...many features of Gothic architecture and art can only be explained...
...exterior architecture is developed...in so much Byzantine art, the effect...Hellenistic art and architecture can at present...known from Byzantine buildings...Hamilton, The Art and Architecture of Russia...Hamilton, Byzantine Architecture...
...Yale University Art gallery, New Haven...Oriental Forerunners of Byzantine Painting Chicago...Mediaeval Church Architecture Baltimore, The...West in Christian art , see Speculum...and Early Medieval Architecture ," in Proceedings...1948 , 1-3. Byzantine style. In Italy...
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...works of art and architecture at the Benedictine...the works of art themselves shows...privileges from Byzantine emperors, and...investment in art and architecture at the convent...great deal of the art and architecture at San Zaccaria...
...early Italian art in Pisa. A common...How did Norman architecture, initially seen...the building as Byzantine, whereas Losh...enthusiasm for Byzantine art echoed the earlier...fresh appraisal of Byzantine art; another was Matthew...
...in early Italian art and the Romanesque...record the medieval architecture of Germany and France...praised its genius and Byzantine style. The neo-Romanesque...structures referenced Byzantine and Lombardic prototypes...Bullen moves from architecture to Brownings "Pictor...scholarship on Christian art--notably by Brownings...
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...Architectural, Art Historical, Liturgical...created in religious architecture between the sacred...Coptic Egypt to Byzantine center and periphery...discusses how the Temple architecture established a sequence...essays addresses Byzantine and Eastern churches...profoundly influenced the art historical study...
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...Century B.C.; Greek Art and the Human Figure; Byzantine and Later Greek Art. Series of 3 DVDs or VHS/each 24 min./$239.95...icon painting and the beginnings of neoclassical architecture. With historical context from the conversion of...
...specifically related to the lost art of figurative representation...communication, a key moment in British architecture for at least two of the panellists...a comment on how figurative art can still convey meaning and...functionalism are clearly not enough in architecture. Having all worked through...
...form in music, visual art, design, architecture, and radical subjectivity...Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York) Organized...figure in the London art world, Stezaker combined...Expressionism, film, architecture, philosophy, cognitive...
...eleventh century and its decoration added in the fourteenth, during the final blaze of glory of a dying empire. Byzantine religious art was intended not only to teach but to inspire awe. Saint Savior accomplishes both purposes brilliantly. Murals...
...account of recent developments in art and architecture. Significantly, we get very...Gothic, Renaissance, Baroque, Byzantine, Neoclassical, Romanesque...that the humanist tradition in architecture and art speaks to mankind, not to classes...
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...Churchs role in "American Byzantine" architecture and growing publicity...center here for Vatican art are part of a push...moves from a history of Byzantine art in Europe to the building...it seems to me." Byzantine art used mosaics, angular...
...expansive in the art displayed from Byzantine countries and territories...the fairytale-like architecture around him that amazes...most exalted of all Byzantine art forms. Mosaic, the...those unfamiliar with Byzantine art, the mosaic "Deacon...
...Christian history, architecture and art, Mr. Sonski says...Madonna and Child. The Byzantine Ruthenian chapel...Crypt Church, the Byzantine-Romanesque-style architecture. "The shrine gives...chance to learn how art and architecture...
...A wealth of 20th-century art makes the MuseuDe Arte Contemporanea...fashion what Rome is to ancient architecture. It is a city where the fashion-conscious...was a key city of theRoman, Byzantine and Ottoman Empires, and has...antiquity at the Museum Of Byzantine Culture (mbp.gr) and theArchaeological...
...coming back. Consider, also, Byzantine and Gothic churches. The buildings...an associate professor of art at the University of Maryland...to be a counterpoint to the architecture." At a meeting in Mr. Pellis...architect saying: "I want to make art, not design. Be artists...
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BYZANTINE ART AND ARCHITECTURE works of art and structures works...MacDonald, Early Christian and Byzantine Architecture (1963); I. Hutter, Early Christian and Byzantine Art (1988). ____________________ Copyright...
...to Constantinople (see Byzantine art and architecture ). Major artistic centers...and the Moscow school of art and architecture became the official liturgical...See G. H. Hamilton, The Art and Architecture of Russia (1954, rev. ed...
...ART AND ARCHITECTURE see especially the survey articles on Early Christian art and architecture , Byzantine art and architecture , Coptic art , Merovingian art and architecture , Carolingian architecture and art , Romanesque...
...ARCHITECTURE AND ART the artistic...Romanesque architecture incorporates components of Byzantine and Eastern...Venice and other Byzantine structures help...German Romanesque architecture on the other...of Ottonian art . The following...
...the Byzantine emperors (see Byzantine art and architecture ). Bibliography See R...Early Christian and Byzantine Architecture (1965); J. Beckwith, Early Christian and Byzantine Art (1970...
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