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About Gargoyles

Middle Age Art

Medieval art had little sense of its own art history, and this disinterest was continued in later periods. The Renaissance generally dismissed it as a "barbarous" product of the "Dark Ages", and the term "Gothic" was invented as a deliberately pejorative one, first used by the painter Raphael in a letter of 1519 to characterise all the had come between the demise of Classical art and its supposed 'rebirth' in the Renaissance.

The term was subsequently adopted and popularised in the mid 16th century by the Florentine artist and historian, Giorgio Vasari, who used it to denigrate northern European architecture generally. Illuminated manuscripts continued to be collected by antiquarians, or sit unregarded in monastic or royal libraries, but paintings were mostly of interest if they had historical associations with royalty or others.

As in the Middle Ages themselves, other objects have often survived mainly because they were considered to be relics.

WebMaster Rodney Dills   • Last Updated 2014