Disciplined Exuberance

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-3 Art History Hundred Years' War Northern Europe
0-271-01716
A01=Linda Neagley
Author_Linda Neagley
Category=AGA
Category=AMA
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Category=JBCC
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financial political social High Gothic
Linda Neagley
patrons architect craftsmen clergy community members Paris Normandy Flamboyant
retrospective elements individual expression sociopolitical artisanal cultural contexts construction design theory architect Pierre Robin

Product details

  • ISBN 9780271017167
  • Weight: 1134g
  • Dimensions: 216 x 279mm
  • Publication Date: 18 Aug 1998
  • Publisher: Pennsylvania State University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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In the wake of the Hundred Years' War, Northern Europe saw a reordering of financial, political, and social institutions and with it a change in architectural style. The church of Saint-Maclou in Rouen, which is the most celebrated example of Late Gothic building in France, reflects a society that sought social order in the past while redefining new roles for individuals.

Its profuse ornamentation and sophisticated design established Saint-Maclou as the consummate expression of High Gothic discipline made exuberant by the excesses of Late Gothic craft. The retrospective elements of its style reflect the mood of conservative patrons, while its display of craftsmanship indicates the increasing value placed on individual expression. Linda Neagley now looks at how this particular parish came to build the church, offering a series of interpretive essays that explore its sociopolitical, artisanal, and cultural contexts.

Neagley first examines written sources to document the church's construction and articulate the design theory of architect Pierre Robin. She then focuses on those who were affected by or contributed to the construction, examining the motives of patrons, architect, craftsmen, clergy, and community members. Neagley reconsiders the architectural language of Robin against the backdrop of other structures in Paris and Normandy, and she also examines the cultural values of late medieval craftsmen that contributed to the character of Late Gothic architecture in general and Saint-Maclou in particular.

Disciplined Exuberance provides a wealth of previously unpublished documentary evidence concerning building in fifteenth-century Rouen and Paris and applies computer-based methodology to design analysis. It offers a new criterion for examining French Flamboyant architecture and a new appreciation for this important monument.

Linda Elaine Neagley is Associate Professor of Art and Art History at Rice University.

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