Monumental sculpture The Gothic period is essentially defined by
Gothic architecture, and does not entirely fit with the development of style in sculpture in either its start or finish. The facades of large churches, especially around doors, continued to have large tympanums, but also rows of sculpted figures spreading around them. The statues on the Western (Royal) Portal at
Chartres Cathedral () show an elegant but exaggerated columnar elongation, but those on the south
transept portal, from 1215 to 1220, show a more naturalistic style and increasing detachment from the wall behind, and some awareness of the classical tradition. These trends were continued in the west portal at
Reims Cathedral of a few years later, where the figures are almost in the round, as became usual as Gothic spread across Europe.
Bamberg Cathedral has perhaps the largest assemblage of 13th century sculpture, culminating in 1240 with the
Bamberg Rider, the first life-size
equestrian statue in Western art since the 6th century. ''"In Italy the Gospel of Gothic was preached from pulpits not from tympana, and the unit of the sculptor's thinking was an autonomous, self-consistent work of art"'' (
John Pope-Hennessy).
Nicola Pisano (1258–78) and his son
Giovanni developed a style that is often called
Proto-Renaissance, with unmistakable influence from Roman sarcophagi and sophisticated and crowded compositions, including a sympathetic handling of nudity, in marble relief panels on Nicola's
Pulpit in the Pisa Baptistery (signed 1260), both their
pulpit of Siena Cathedral (1265–68), the
Fontana Maggiore in
Perugia, and Giovanni's
pulpit in Pistoia of 1301. Another revival of classical style is seen in the
International Gothic work of
Claus Sluter and his followers in
Burgundy and
Flanders around 1400. Late Gothic sculpture continued in the North, with a fashion for very large, wooden, sculpted altarpieces with increasingly virtuoso carving and large numbers agitated expressive figures. Later works in
limewood, specific to the
Upper Rhine and
Bavaria in southern Germany, executed by the huge workshop of
Tilman Riemenschneider or by
Veit Stoss were oftentimes without any
polychromy. The style was continued well into the 16th century, gradually absorbing Italian Renaissance influences, with most surviving examples still in their original location, after much iconoclasm elsewhere. Life-size tomb effigies in stone or
alabaster became popular for the wealthy, and grand multi-level tombs evolved, with the
Scaliger Tombs of
Verona so large they had to be moved outside the church. By the 15th century there was an industry exporting
Nottingham alabaster altar reliefs in groups of panels over much of Europe for economical parishes who could not afford stone retables. The very wealthy collected extravagantly elaborate, jewelled and enamelled metalwork, both secular and religious, like the
Duc de Berry's
Holy Thorn Reliquary, until they ran short of money, when they were melted down again for cash. valley, France, Gothic sculptures independent of architectural ornament were primarily created as devotional objects for the home or intended as donations for local churches, although small
reliefs in
ivory, bone and wood cover both religious and secular subjects, and were for church and domestic use. These sculptures were created by urban artisans, and the most common theme for three-dimensional small statues is the Virgin Mary alone or with a child. Paris was the main centre of ivory workshops, and exported to most of northern Europe, though Italy also had a considerable production. An exemplar of these independent sculptures is among the collections of the Abbey Church of St Denis; the silver-gilt
Virgin and Child dates to 1339 and features Mary enveloped in a flowing cloak holding an infantile Christ figure. a huge number given the population at the time. The
Dunstable Swan Jewel, modelled fully in the round in enamelled gold, is a far more exclusive version, that would have been given to someone very close or important to the donor. == See also ==