c. 1220; the best High Gothic sculpture had largely rediscovered the art of naturalistic figure representation. Gothic art is a variable term depending on the craft, place and time. The term originated with the
Gothic architecture which developed in France from about 1137 with the rebuilding of the
Abbey Church of St Denis. As with Romanesque architecture, this included
sculpture as an integral part of the style, with even larger
portals and other figures on the
facades of churches the location of the most important sculpture, until the late period, when large carved
altarpieces and
reredos, usually in painted and gilded wood, became an important focus in many churches.
Gothic painting did not appear until around 1200 (this date has many qualifications), when it diverged from Romanesque style. A
Gothic style in sculpture originates in France around 1144 and spread throughout Europe, becoming by the 13th century the international style, replacing Romanesque, though in sculpture and painting the transition was not as sharp as in architecture. The majority of Romanesque cathedrals and large churches were replaced by Gothic buildings, at least in those places benefiting from the economic growth of the period—Romanesque architecture is now best seen in areas that were subsequently relatively depressed, like many southern regions of France and Italy, or northern Spain. The new architecture allowed for much larger windows, and stained glass of a quality never excelled is perhaps the type of art most associated in the popular mind with the Gothic, although churches with nearly all their original glass, like the
Sainte-Chapelle in Paris, are extremely rare anywhere, and unknown in Britain. Most Gothic wall-paintings have also disappeared; these remained very common, though in parish churches often rather crudely executed. Secular buildings also often had wall-paintings, although royalty preferred the much more expensive tapestries, which were carried along as they travelled between their many palaces and castles, or taken with them on military campaigns—the finest collection of late-medieval textile art comes from the Swiss booty at the
Battle of Nancy, when they defeated and killed
Charles the Bold,
Duke of Burgundy, and captured all his baggage train. 's huge
Maestà altarpiece for
Siena Cathedral, with a
gold ground. As mentioned in the previous section, the Gothic period coincided with a greatly increased emphasis on the Virgin Mary, and it was in this period that the
Virgin and Child became such a hallmark of Catholic art. Saints were also portrayed far more often, and many of the range of
attributes developed to identify them visually for a still largely illiterate public first appeared. During this period
panel painting for altarpieces, often
polyptyches and smaller works became newly important. Previously
icons on panels had been much more common in Byzantine art than in the West, although many now lost panel paintings made in the West are documented from much earlier periods, and initially Western painters on panel were very largely under the sway of Byzantine models, especially in Italy, from where most early Western panel paintings come. The process of establishing a distinct Western style was begun by
Cimabue and
Duccio, and completed by
Giotto, who is traditionally regarded as the starting point for the development of Renaissance painting. Most panel painting remained more conservative than miniature painting however, partly because it was seen by a wide public.
International Gothic describes courtly Gothic art from about 1360 to 1430, after which Gothic art begins to merge into the
Renaissance art that had begun to form itself in Italy during the
Trecento, with a return to classical principles of composition and realism, with the sculptor
Nicola Pisano and the painter
Giotto as especially formative figures. The
Très Riches Heures du Duc de Berry is one of the best known works of International Gothic. The transition to the Renaissance occurred at different times in different places -
Early Netherlandish painting is poised between the two, as is the Italian painter
Pisanello. Outside Italy Renaissance styles appeared in some works in courts and some wealthy cities while other works, and all work beyond these centres of innovation, continued late Gothic styles for a period of some decades. The
Protestant Reformation often provided an end point for the Gothic tradition in areas that went Protestant, as it was associated with Catholicism. The invention of a comprehensive mathematically based system of
linear perspective is a defining achievement of the early-15th-century
Italian Renaissance in
Florence, but Gothic painting had already made great progress in the naturalistic depiction of distance and volume, though it did not usually regard them as essential features of a work if other aims conflicted with them, and late Gothic sculpture was increasingly naturalistic. In the mid-15th century Burgundian miniature (right) the artist seems keen to show his skill at representing buildings and blocks of stone obliquely, and managing scenes at different distances. But his general attempt to reduce the size of more distant elements is unsystematic. Sections of the composition are at a similar scale, with relative distance shown by overlapping,
foreshortening, and further objects being higher than nearer ones, though the workmen at left do show finer adjustment of size. But this is abandoned on the right where the most important figure is much larger than the mason. , from a printed
blockbook with hand colour, c. 1455–58, an early example of the
Dance of Death. The end of the period includes new media such as
prints; along with small panel paintings these were frequently used for the emotive
andachtsbilder ("devotional images") influenced by new religious trends of the period. These were images of moments detached from the narrative of the
Passion of Christ designed for meditation on his sufferings, or those of the Virgin: the
Man of Sorrows,
Pietà,
Veil of Veronica or
Arma Christi. The trauma of the
Black Death in the mid-14th century was at least partly responsible for the popularity of themes such as the
Dance of Death and
Memento mori. In the cheap
blockbooks with text (often in the
vernacular) and images cut in a single
woodcut, works such as that illustrated (left), the
Ars Moriendi (
Art of Dying) and typological verse summaries of the bible like the
Speculum Humanae Salvationis (
Mirror of Human Salvation) were the most popular.
Renaissance Humanism and the rise of a wealthy urban middle class, led by merchants, began to transform the old social context of art, with the revival of realistic portraiture and the appearance of printmaking and the
self-portrait, together with the decline of forms like stained glass and the illuminated manuscript.
Donor portraits, in the early medieval period largely the preserve of popes, kings and abbots, now showed businessmen and their families, and churches were becoming crowded with the
tomb monuments of the well-off. , c. 1440, with Catherine kneeling before the Virgin and Child, surrounded by her family heraldry. Opposite is the start of
Matins in the
Little Office, illustrated by the
Annunciation to Joachim. The typical exuberantly decorated margins descend from
insular art, and are unlike anything in the Byzantine tradition. The
book of hours, a type of manuscript normally owned by laymen, or even more often, laywomen, became the type of manuscript most often heavily illustrated from the 14th century onwards, and also by this period, the lead in producing miniatures had passed to lay artists, also very often women. In the most important centres of illumination, Paris and in the 15th century the cities of
Flanders, there were large workshops, exporting to other parts of Europe. Other forms of art, such as small ivory reliefs, stained glass, tapestries and
Nottingham alabasters (cheap carved panels for altarpieces) were produced in similar conditions, and artists and craftsmen in cities were usually covered by the
craft guild system—the
goldsmiths' guild was typically among the richest in a city, and painters were members of a special
Guild of St Luke in many places. Secular works, often using subjects concerned with
courtly love or
knightly heroism, were produced as illuminated manuscripts, carved ivory mirror-cases, tapestries and elaborate gold table centrepieces like
nefs. It begins to be possible to distinguish much greater numbers of individual artists, some of whom had international reputations. Art collectors begin to appear, of manuscripts among the great nobles, like
John, Duke of Berry (1340–1416) and of prints and other works among those with moderate wealth. In the wealthier areas tiny cheap religious
woodcuts brought art in an approximation of the latest style even into the homes of peasants by the late 15th century.
Virgin Mary File:Encaustic Virgin.jpg|The oldest Byzantine icon of Mary, c. 600,
encaustic, at
Saint Catherine's Monastery retains much of Greek realist style. File:Statue Our Lady Orcival.jpg|Romanesque statue of the Virgin as
Seat of Wisdom, 12th century Image:Ravensburger Schutzmantelmadonna.jpg|The "
Ravensburger Schutzmantelmadonna", painted limewood of ca 1480,
Virgin of Mercy type. Attributed to
Michel Erhart. Image:Unicorn annunciation.jpg|"Hunt of the Unicorn
Annunciation" () from a Netherlandish Book of Hours collected by
John Pierpont Morgan. For the complicated
iconography, see
Hortus conclusus ==Subsequent reputation==