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Stained Glass of the Middle Ages in England and France Part 13

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THE STYLE OF THE THIRD PERIOD

[Sidenote: Divergence between English and French schools.]

A notable feature of the fifteenth century is the divergence which takes place in it between the styles of English and French stained gla.s.s. Although in some respects they develop along parallel lines the two no longer form, as they did almost to the end of the fourteenth century, one school. The Hundred Years' War has done its work, and produced a separation of spirit for which the world has, perhaps, been the poorer ever since.

Indeed for the first half of the fifteenth century, during which the best of the English work was done, the quant.i.ty of stained gla.s.s produced in France seems to have been almost negligible, and a comparison of the conditions of the two countries is a sufficient explanation of this fact. While England was becoming rich and prosperous and developing her foreign trade, France was laid waste by war and struggling to free herself from the foreigner who had beaten her down. It was not till the English had been finally expelled, and France had emerged from the struggle a stronger State than she had ever been before, that the art revived; and when it did so it owed little, as is not surprising, to English influence, but on the other hand began to feel, almost at once, the influence of the Continental schools of painting.

In England, on the other hand, in spite of the quarrels of the n.o.bles and the rival claimants to the throne, the middle cla.s.s were steadily growing wealthy and powerful. The wool trade was bringing a great deal of money into the country, and the result is still seen not only in the number and size of Perpendicular churches that were built, but in the immense output of stained gla.s.s that took place. The fifteenth century, indeed, was by far the most prolific period in the history of English stained gla.s.s, and, in spite of four hundred years of destruction, vast quant.i.ties of it still remain.

[Sidenote: General characteristics of the English style.]

The general characteristics which distinguish the English style in gla.s.s in the Third Period--the "Perpendicular" style--are as follows:--

(1) The type of canopy.

(2) The increased amount of white in figure and canopy work, with the delicate and accomplished use of silver stain.

(3) The more advanced style of drawing.

(4) The abandonment of natural form in ornament.

(5) The supersession of all other forms of grisaille ornament by regular quarries.

(6) The material used.

[Sidenote: The canopy.]

(1) _The Type of Canopy._--Although in the fifteenth, as in the fourteenth century, figures were occasionally placed directly on a background of white quarries, as may be seen at York, in the clerestory of St. Martin's-le-Grand, and in the transepts of the Minster, the fifteenth century artists showed no signs of wis.h.i.+ng to abandon the canopy.

It was a curious freak of fate that imposed the canopy upon stained-gla.s.s designers and made it a _sine qua non_ for two hundred years. It has certain obvious advantages, it is true. It conveniently filled the head of the light, and its upright lines and pinnacles repeated those of the surrounding architecture and made the window part of it; but the imitation of a stone niche in gla.s.s is hard to justify on abstract grounds, and it is difficult now to understand the enthusiasm which, as soon as it was introduced, made its adoption so universal that, with few exceptions, the artists of the day seemed unable to conceive of a single figure or a set of subject panels otherwise than surmounted by a bewildering ma.s.s of crockets and pinnacles. It is true that in the hands of mediaeval craftsmen, in England at least, there was no attempt, as there was later, at literal imitation of stone-work; the canopy was rather ornament with an architectural motif, and as such possessed beauty; but I cannot help thinking that if they had never adopted it they would have evolved some other ornamental form which, while serving the same purposes, would have been more strictly in accordance with the rules of sound art, and might have given more room for the play of individual fancy.

[Ill.u.s.tration: PLATE XL SMALL FIGURES IN WHITE AND STAIN, FROM ALL SAINTS', NORTH STREET, YORK Fifteenth Century]

Though, however, the English fifteenth century craftsmen did not abandon the canopy, they profoundly modified it and made it far more pliant and adaptable. Plates x.x.xIV. and x.x.xV. from York will give a better idea of the canopies of the early fifteenth century than any description. It will be seen that the single overpowering crocketted gable and wall-sided tower of the fourteenth century has disappeared, and in its place we have a froth of pinnacles, windows, b.u.t.tresses and niches all in white and yellow stain, on a background of colour. The earlier attempt at modelling the canopies in the round, which is seen in the work of the Winchester school, had been abandoned, and although every little shaft has its light and dark side delicately distinguished, this counts for little except to diversify the surface, the forms being expressed princ.i.p.ally in strong and simple outline. The extent to which this simplification of outline was carried may be seen in the little crocketted pinnacles, such as those at the bottom of Plate x.x.xIV., which are characteristic of all English work of the time. There is, as you may see, no attempt to draw or model the foliation of the crockets, which are simply k.n.o.bs outlined in the flat with a thick black line. This method is the salvation of English Perpendicular work, and shows the thorough understanding on the part of our craftsmen of the technical problem. In French work later on in the century, and in much modern pseudo-Gothic work, the attempt is made to express the canopy work in fine lines and delicate modelling, which, in the result, appears confused and indistinct, and too weak for the leading and for the coloured figure work it encloses.

[Sidenote: The skilful use of silver stain.]

(2) _The Increased Amount of White used._--Not only is the canopy white, but there is also as a rule a good deal of white in the figures within it, which are generally relieved against a diapered flat background of colour. Just one figure at New College has the brown-pink flesh colour, and that is its last appearance. Everywhere else one finds white used, the hair, in the case of women and young men, being stained yellow. This large increase in the use of white gla.s.s was accompanied, and indeed made possible, by a most delicate and skilful use of the yellow silver stain. This operation, of all others in stained-gla.s.s work, calls for the greatest exercise of taste and judgment as well as skill on the part of the craftsman,--_experto crede_,--and in its use the English workers of the first three-quarters of the fifteenth century stand unrivalled.

[Sidenote: Loss of mosaic character.]

This use of white in the figures and canopies rendered unnecessary the old fourteenth century plan of dividing the window up into alternate panels of grisaille and colour, and this is abandoned. Another result is the loss of the essentially mosaic character of the older windows.

So much could now be expressed with stain and brown enamel on one piece of gla.s.s that, although the pieces used were still comparatively small, it was no longer necessary to surround every form with a lead as a matter of course. Plate x.x.xVI. is a good instance of this. The green-striped background to the figures is the work of the restorer and was probably once blue, as in Plate x.x.xVII., and this and the red mantle surcoat and s.h.i.+eld are the only forms that it was absolutely necessary to lead in separately. It is true that, either for emphasis or from habit, the artist has outlined the man's knees in lead; but he need not have done so, and it would indeed have been easier not to. In the next plate (Plate x.x.xVII.) the leading on the white takes very little account of the drawing.

Out of these conditions then arose a wholly new att.i.tude towards the leading. Hitherto the disposition of the lead-work had followed naturally and inevitably from the design--the artist drew in lead, so to speak, merely supplementing it with the finer painted line; whereas now the leads had, in part at least, to be so arranged as not to interfere with the drawing, or only to emphasize it when needed, a matter requiring much more thought. A comparison of either of the above plates with Plate IV. will ill.u.s.trate the difference. Hence we find a gradual tendency to use larger pieces of gla.s.s and fewer leads (the latter being sometimes concealed behind the iron-work), till by the end of the century the jewel-like quality of the early gla.s.s is a thing wholly lost and forgotten.

[Sidenote: The method of drawing.]

[Sidenote: Matt shading.]

(3) _The more Advanced Style of Drawing._--The older conventions in drawing had, as we have seen, become outgrown and abandoned, and all through the last part of the fourteenth century there is a steady struggle for a more advanced method of expression. At the beginning of the fifteenth century, drawing, in England at least, crystallized once more into a convention satisfying to the mind of the time, which left the artist free to tell his story. Plates x.x.xIX. to XLIII. are examples of it as found at York, and Plate XLIV. from Canterbury does not greatly differ in method. The drawing still depends chiefly on line work, but the line work is far finer than before and is used to express modelling with the help of the matt shading. This last is the form of shading which has survived to modern times, and is done by laying a flat semi-transparent coat or "matt" of enamel over the whole surface of the gla.s.s, and, when it is dry, and before it is fired, brus.h.i.+ng out graduated lights and half tones with a small stiff hog's-hair brush. Sometimes, but not always, the matt was stippled when wet, as may be seen in Plate XLII. In later times the matt shading was, and sometimes still is, abused in the attempt to give modelling in high relief by its means alone, a method which results in the loading of the gla.s.s with opaque muddy brown, while the modelling becomes untrue with changing lights. This, however, was hardly done within the limits of the period I am writing about in this book, in which the drawing of form is still princ.i.p.ally dependent on line work, and is merely helped and softened with the matt.

[Ill.u.s.tration: PLATE XLI HEADS, FROM ALL SAINTS', NORTH STREET, YORK Fifteenth Century]

[Sidenote: The type of figure.]

The figures themselves in contrast to those of the previous period are rather short and ungraceful, but, in the best work at least, very much alive. The quaint nose of which Plate XLII. is an extreme type is curiously universal throughout English work of the time, and was, I suppose, the accepted type of beauty.

[Sidenote: Forms used in the ornament.]

(4) _The Abandonment of Natural Plant Forms in Ornament._--The natural plant forms, which were so universally used in fourteenth century ornament, were abruptly abandoned at the beginning of the fifteenth.

Their place is taken, in the diapered backgrounds to the figures, by a curious long serrated leaf, rather like certain kinds of seaweed, which may be seen in Plates x.x.xVII. and x.x.xVIII. Borders become less frequent, and when they occur generally consist of a leaf of something the same sort, in white and stain, wrapping round a central stem, sometimes with and sometimes without a coloured background. Later on, the conventional pomegranate pattern is occasionally introduced in vestments and hangings, but it is the exception for coloured garments to be ornamented except with an edging. White garments are sometimes powdered with little devices in yellow stain, as in Plate x.x.xIX. The edgings to bishops' copes are often of white set with coloured jewels, which are sometimes let into the middle of a piece of gla.s.s without its being cut across--a _tour de force_ of glazing very difficult to accomplish and not worth the trouble when done.

(5) _Supersession of Other Forms of Grisaille by Regular Quarries._--The "bulged" quarries disappear by the middle of the fourteenth century and the ordinary straight-sided, diamond-shaped quarry is henceforth the rule. By the end of the century the continuous flowing pattern running through them is abandoned also.

There had been a tendency towards the end, as may be seen in Plate XXVI., for the pattern to be so disposed that a flower, or other feature, was repeated in the middle of each quarry--in a transitional window at York, which I have referred to elsewhere, there is a continuous pattern with a bird in the centre of each quarry perching upon a branch of it. In the fifteenth century the connecting pattern was left out, and quarries are decorated solely by a little device in the centre of each. Sometimes these are purely conventional, but often they are the occasion for delightful exercise of fancy on the artist's part and form an exception to the general rule of the disuse of natural ornament. Birds, insects, flowers, and leaves are used, as well as heraldic devices and monograms, all expressed very simply in firm pure line work touched with the yellow stain.

[Sidenote: The change in material.]

[Sidenote: Flashed ruby.]

(6) _The Material used._--At the beginning of the fifteenth century there is a very marked change in the material used. It becomes thinner and flatter--sometimes very thin indeed--and the colour is more even.

Thirteenth century "ruby," seen edgeways, reveals itself as composed, for nearly, if not quite, half its thickness, of alternate minute layers of red and white, the rest of the thickness being white. It has been thought that to this is due the wonderful luminous quality of the early ruby. Gradually the number of these layers are reduced till at the beginning of the fifteenth century the red is all concentrated into one layer on the surface. This is the "flashed" gla.s.s referred to at the beginning of the book, and one soon begins to find instances of ornament chipped out of it. The lion on the red s.h.i.+eld in Plate x.x.xVI.

has, I think, been got in this way, and a later instance may be seen in Plate L. in the girdle of the prophet Hosea on the right.

[Ill.u.s.tration: PLATE XLII HEAD, FROM ST. MICHAEL'S, SPURRIERGATE, YORK Fifteenth Century]

The rich blues of earlier times are replaced by a more sober greyish blue, which, however, is a very effective colour in gla.s.s. The colours are not perfectly flat tints, for there are gradations in them, but the streaky, crumbly quality of the early gla.s.s is gone. The craftsman was beginning to rely for quality less on the gla.s.s itself than on what he put on it.

XIV

FIFTEENTH CENTURY GLa.s.s AT YORK

The very well-defined and distinctive style I have described, which became universal in English fifteenth century work, and which, from the architecture with which it is a.s.sociated, we call Perpendicular, was not, I think, evolved by the Winchester School, although no doubt they influenced it. Where it began must always be something of a mystery, but some work in the east window of Exeter Cathedral is very suggestive in this connection.

[Sidenote: Lyen's work at Exeter.]

This window, glazed originally at the beginning of the fourteenth century, was enlarged and rebuilt with Perpendicular tracery in 1390-91 through the munificence of one of the canons, Henry Blakeborn; and in 1392 Robert Lyen, glazier, citizen of Exeter, and master glazier to the Cathedral, was commissioned to adapt the old gla.s.s to its new setting, adding what was necessary of his own work to fill the s.p.a.ce. Robert Lyen's work is easily to be distinguished from the earlier work (which, besides that of 1302, includes four figures of about 1340-50, which he may have brought from other windows to fill up with). It consists of six figures, of which only three are under canopies of Lyen's time, and of a row, across the bottom, of short double-arched canopies enclosing coats of arms of past bishops of Exeter. The drawing is about equal to that of the Winchester School, but the canopies, with their mult.i.tude of crocketted pinnacles in strong outline, are far nearer to the regular Perpendicular type, such as we find at York, than anything that was being done by the Winchester School at that date.

Was the work of Robert Lyen an example of a style which had become general throughout the west, and of which the influence extended as far as Coventry? For in 1405 John Thornton of Coventry was commissioned to fill with stained gla.s.s the huge east windows of the new choir of York Minster, and this is the earliest existing window, of which the date is known, in which the Perpendicular style in gla.s.s has taken definite form.

[Ill.u.s.tration: PLATE XLIII HEAD, FROM ST. MICHAEL'S, SPURRIERGATE, YORK Fifteenth Century]

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Stained Glass of the Middle Ages in England and France Part 13 summary

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