鈥楩rom Two to Three Dimensions: Drawings and Design Processes in Medieval Vaulting鈥, Dr Sophie Dentzer听
Medieval masons did not have Auto-CAD and other programmes to plan the erection of vaults three-dimensionally. Yet the successful erection of a vault required considerable planning. For instance, the junctions of ribs had to be carefully planned as bosses 鈥 with the correct number of ribs and appropriate moulding profiles 鈥 were often carved in advance of construction. This lecture will address the design, planning and construction process of vaults in the Middle Ages, with a particular focus on drawings and the translation of rib patterns from two to three dimensions. Design (when architectural forms and elements were chosen) and construction (when those forms were erected) were closely interlinked during the Middle Ages, with no distinct separation between theory and practice. The vault is probably the largest three-dimensional element of a great church, yet the establishment of rib patterns required experimentation in two dimensions. Given the scarcity of architectural drawings in medieval Britain, I will rely heavily on Continental examples and scholarship, principally German, to argue that drawings were used in Britain at each stage of the process and that they were essential in translating rib patterns into three-dimensions.
Sophie Dentzer-Niklasson recently completed her PhD at the Courtauld Institute of Art with a thesis entitled 鈥English Decorative Vaulting: Design, Invention and Integration in Gothic Architecture c. 1300鈥, which was supervised by Dr Tom Nickson and funded by the Society of Architectural Historians in Great Britain. Her doctoral research focused on England but also included comparative material from Continental Europe.
鈥楥ollections in the Rewriting of History: The Sum and the Roles of its Parts鈥, Dr Amanda W. Dotseth
The treasury of the palatine chapel and monastery of San Isidoro de Le贸n is or was once home to an exceptional diversity of objects. A notable collection of luxury goods either made or repurposed for Christian use during the eleventh and twelfth centuries survived at the site until the nineteenth century when select items were removed to the Museo Arqueol贸gico Nacional in Madrid. Owing to its quality as well as its enigma, not to mention a key association with the formative period of Spain鈥檚 Christian past, San Isidoro鈥檚 treasure has, collectively, played an intriguing role in the writing of both institutional and national histories in both the medieval and modern periods.
Amanda W. Dotseth completed her听PhD on Romanesque art in Spain听at the Courtauld Institute of Art in 2015. Her research is grounded in the Spanish Middle Ages but has addressed a wide range of topics, from architecture to panel painting. She is currently听the Mellon/Meadows/Prado Postdoctoral Fellow and an associated scholar in the project 鈥淭he Medieval Treasury Across Frontiers and Generations: The Kingdom of Le贸n-Castile in the Context of Muslim-Christian Interchange,鈥 funded by a Spanish Nacional Grant. She has previously held a Fulbright Scholarship听as well as a pre-doctoral fellowship in the History Institute of the Spanish Nacional Research Council in Madrid. She completed her M.A. at Southern Methodist University after which she served as the Assistant Curator of the Meadows Museum for three years. There she curated numerous exhibitions and was the primary editor of the catalogue:听Fernando Gallego and His听Workshop 鈥 The Altarpiece from Ciudad Rodrigo. Most recently she co-curated the Meadows Museum鈥檚 exhibition听窜耻谤产补谤谩苍:听Jacob and His Twelve Sons听鈥 Paintings from Auckland Castle and is working on a symposium and book project that will examine the collection and diversity of objects produced by and for medieval Iberia under the tentative title, The Medieval World in a Spanish Context, supported by the Mellon Foundation.