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<article dtd-version="1.1" article-type="book-review">
    <front>
        <journal-meta>
            <journal-id>TMR</journal-id>
            <journal-title-group>
                <journal-title>The Medieval Review</journal-title>
            </journal-title-group>
            <issn pub-type="epub">1096-746X</issn>
            <publisher>
                <publisher-name>Indiana University</publisher-name>
            </publisher>
        </journal-meta>
        <article-meta>
            <article-id pub-id-type="publisher-id">21.09.12</article-id>
            <title-group>
                <article-title>21.09.12, Feltman/Thompson, The Long Lives of Medieval Art and Architecture</article-title>
            </title-group>
            <contrib-group>
                <contrib contrib-type="author">
                    <name>
                        <surname>Dr. Elizabeth Carson Pastan</surname>
                        <given-names/>
                    </name>
                    <aff>Emory University</aff>
                    <address>
                        <email>epastan@emory.edu</email>
                    </address>
                </contrib>
            </contrib-group>
            <pub-date publication-format="epub" date-type="pub" iso-8601-date="2021">
                <year>2021</year>
            </pub-date>
            <product product-type="book">
                <person-group>
                    <name>
                        <surname>Feltman, Jennifer M., and Sarah Thompson, eds</surname>
                        <given-names/>
                    </name>
                </person-group>
                <source>The Long Lives of Medieval Art and Architecture</source>
                <year iso-8601-date="2019">2019</year>
                <publisher-loc>London, UK</publisher-loc>
                <publisher-name>Routledge</publisher-name>
                <page-range>Pp. xxi, 322</page-range>
                <price>$160.00 (hardback)</price>
                <isbn>978-0-81539-673-4 (hardback)</isbn>
            </product>
            <permissions>
                <copyright-statement>Copyright 2021 Trustees of Indiana University. Indiana University provides the information contained in this file for non-commercial, personal, or research use only. All other use, including but not limited to commercial or scholarly reproductions, redistribution, publication or transmission, whether by electronic means or otherwise, without prior written permission of the copyright holder is strictly prohibited.</copyright-statement>
            </permissions>
        </article-meta>
    </front>
    <body>
        <p><italic>The Long Lives of Medieval Art and Architecture</italic> is an anthology inspired
            by Fernand Braudel's concept of the <italic>longue durée,</italic> articulated in his
            foundational article of 1958. Braudel's expansive approach to history
            is here adapted to inform the planning, making, unmaking, and remaking of works of art.
            As one author in the volume queries, "just how long are the lives of medieval buildings
            or artworks? And when should scholars start and stop paying attention to them" (17)? A
            broad chronological perspective has been particularly important in the study of works
            dealing with architecture such as Marvin Trachtenberg's
                <italic>Building-in-Time</italic> of 2010, which is cited by several authors, and it
            is also part of the DNA of Pierre Nora's <italic>Lieux de Mémoire</italic> of 1989. [1]
            In her introduction to the volume, Jennifer Feltman explains that focus on a diachronic
            approach is particularly timely now, with so many interpretive models and methodologies
            on offer, affording a fruitful opportunity for scholars to take stock and retool
            (3).</p>
        <p>Feltman's introduction is enriched by Nicola Camerlenghi's chapter, "How Long Are the
            Lives of Medieval Buildings?" (Ch. 1), which deepens the volume through its
            consideration of such interestingly diverse examples as the Great Mosque of Damascus,
            St. Peter's in Rome, Dura Europos, and the Ise Shrine in Japan. Using the analogy of
            Hume's oak, which grows from a small seed to a large tree that no longer physically
            resembles that seed but remains the same oak, Camerlenghi explains the notion of
            "essence" that underlies the volume: "once we allow that buildings and artifacts are not
            just perceived to have 'multiple historicities,' but that this is an ontological quality
            of any object that perdures in time, then we can begin to understand them as complex
            processes" (28).</p>
        <p>The anthology consists of seventeen chapters that are organized into five sections:
            "Essence &amp; Community"; "Transformation"; "Narration; Memory &amp; Oblivion"; and
            "Restoration". These sections structure the contributions coherently, although because
            the chapters other than Camerlenghi's focus on monographic case studies--which are
            replete with local detail and often startling peculiarities--many of them could easily
            be grouped elsewhere within the volume. Imogen Tedbury's contribution on the Lorenzetti
            frescoes originally in the church of San Francesco in Siena (ch. 11), for example, is
            now grouped in the "Memory and Oblivion" section, but because of her larger point about
            the slippage between medieval and neo-medieval works restored in the 19th century, the
            chapter might also join the section on "Restoration." A separate section dealing with
            the archaeology and reuse of books, discussed in chapters by Emily N. Savage on an
            unfinished French Book of Hours (ch. 7) and Lynley Anne Herbert on the Carrow Psalter
            (ch. 10), could also be imagined. At the same time, one appreciates the chapters'
            integration with other kinds of materials. Herbert, for example, offering a master class
            in codicological manipulation, is included in the section on "Narration," because of her
            demonstration that in an effort to ride out changing belief systems, new narratives were
            created within the Carrow Psalter. These include the erasure and concealment of
            references to Thomas Becket, whose martyrdom is (now) one of the most famous images in
            the book. </p>
        <p>The case studies in the volume are drawn from works that originated in the present-day
            countries of France, Italy, Spain, England, and Germany, although many of them focus on
            the changing fortunes of the patronage or power structures of their medieval locales and
            examples. This is realized compellingly in works by Matilde Mateo on the Victory Cross
            of Orviedo (ch. 12), and William Diebold on the Magdeburg Rider (ch. 13). In the latter,
            Diebold surveys the decades between 1940-2009, which cover a period of enormous
            upheaval, one that saw a significant reappraisal of what it meant to be "German." Among
            the rich concepts that emerge from the volume, in addition to Mateo's and Diebold's
            highlighting of nationalist interventions, is the question of what constitutes
            authenticity, [2] the adaptive nature of cultic practices, the many questions
            surrounding ownership, and strategies for imagining ephemeral performances. </p>
        <p>Elisa A. Foster's "Lost in Translation: The Virgin of Le Puy" (ch. 2) is a case study
            that fully justifies and rewards the approach of the <italic>longue durée</italic>. [3]
            The famous medieval wooden cult statue of Le Puy of c. 1096 was destroyed in a
            Revolutionary bonfire of 1794, only to be replaced in the mid-19th century by the statue
            currently in the cathedral which "seems to have inherited all the miracle-working
            properties of her predecessor" (31). In investigating medieval conceptions of the copy,
            as something that can retain an attachment to the original, though like Hume's oak is
            rarely an exact replica, Foster engages fruitfully with the long life of this work of
            art. A related <italic>vierge noire</italic> she identifies in the neighboring church of
            Notre-Dame-des-Neiges is both a copy and a cult object in its own right and further adds
            to our grasp of this venerated but elusive work, [4] while also revealing larger
            processes of signification and adaptation over time. </p>
        <p>The importance of the diachronic approach is further developed in Laura Jacobus's
            chapter, "Flying Pigs, Fiery Whirlwinds, and a 300-Year-Old Virgin" (ch. 3). Jacobus
            builds on her prior work on Enrico Scrovegni's Arena Chapel to investigate the
            performance of the Annunciation reenacted annually in the courtyard before the chapel in
            which the actors playing the part of the angel and Virgin Annunciate were dressed in
            clothing lent by Scrovegni's wife Marchesa Jacopina d'Este. The author tracks eyewitness
            accounts of the festival of the Annunciation, Jacopina's will, inventories, and
            contemporaneous images (including Giotto's <italic>Ognissanti Madonna</italic>) to
            explore how the marchesa's clothing, which Jacobus plausibly argues was woven with
            family heraldry (53-54), allowed her to participate by proxy in the festival. Jacopina's
            posthumous bequest to the feast gave further impetus to the tradition as her garments
            were creatively recycled, restored, and periodically given fashion updates over the
            centuries. Through this example, the <italic>longue durée</italic> of the ephermal
            medieval performance is beautifully woven into the anthology.</p>
        <p>How we might imagine the ways medieval works performed in their setting is also at stake
            in Maeve O'Donnell-Morales, "Resurrecting the Medieval Altar: Iberian Virgins in the
            Gothic Castilian Imagination and in Contemporary Museum Contexts" (ch. 8). She focuses
            on the 13th-century cult statue of the Virgin from Seville, whose wooden core contains
            several hinged joints. (136-137) The statue was covered by kidskin, presumably to
            conceal the joints and contribute to a life-like appearance, then dressed in clothing.
            O'Donnell-Morales's consideration of the materials and physical possibilities of this
            example is extended through her discussion of the representations of cult statues of
            Mary in the contemporaneous <italic>Cantigas de Santa Maria</italic> of Alfonso X. In
            addition, O'Donnell-Morales suggests what the Virgin of Seville's range of motion may
            have looked like through analogy to stop-motion animation, which she persuasively argues
            captures the "subtle yet potent changes" through the small, halting changes of serial
            revelation well conveyed in animation (142-143).</p>
        <p>A number of case studies involve the architectural setting, which is pursued in the
            chapters by Amanda W. Dotseth on San Quirce de Burgos (ch. 4), Charles R. Morscheck on
            the early Christian basilica of Santa Tecla that was cleared away to make room for Milan
            Cathedral (ch. 5), and Nancy Wu on a Romanesque Portal and its doors in the Cloisters
            (ch. 9). The architectural setting emerges with particular clarity in Kyle G. Sweeney's
            "The Long Life of Notre-Dame de Louviers" (ch. 6), which ironically features a
            two-dimensional misrepresentation of the Norman parish church in Louviers. Sweeney turns
            to a 16th-century image of the church in stained glass (Fig. 6.3), which like other
            compelling images of buildings of the period includes a selection of notable features,
            both recognizable and reimagined. In relaying his case, Sweeney broadens his discussion
            to include the growing importance of "architectural portraiture" in the early modern era
            through advances in draftsmanship, travel journals, detailed architectural descriptions,
            competitions, and the advent of printing. Yet these developments did not necessarily
            result in increased accuracy. Rather, as Sweeney demonstrates, in "employing strategies
            of representation that extend beyond the actual construction" (111), these rendering
            techniques quite literally allowed each age to build its own Gothic.</p>
        <p>Restoration is a theme that encompasses many of the examples throughout the volume
            because, as Feltman cogently explains, "the very conditions that have allowed the
            survival of 'original' medieval works have required their transformation through
            alternations, augmentations, and restorations" (1). The last section in the anthology
            entitled "Restoration" includes Cathleen Hoeniger's study of the salvaging of the Bronze
            Doors of Benevento (ch. 14), Catherine Emma Walden on the founder's tomb from Salisbury
            Cathedral (ch. 15), Meredith Cohen's analysis of the cleaning of the interior of
            Chartres Cathedral (ch. 16), and Sarah Thompson's splendid contribution on the ill-fated
            north tower of Saint-Denis (ch. 17). But fully half of the contributions in the volume
            address the issue of restoration in some fashion. Among the stand outs is Cohen's
            "Understanding the Restoration at Chartres Cathedral." Her nuanced account fully
            recognizes the ambiguities and contingencies that accompany any intervention (291), as
            she judiciously explores the most recent cleaning of the interior surfaces that took
            place at Chartres Cathedral between 2009-2017. [5] One may or may not disagree with
            Cohen's assessment of the outcome at Chartres, which she characterizes as drastic and
            amounting to "creative iconoclasm" (294), but she is specific and even-handed in
            relaying what occurred over time at the cathedral. Among the well-chosen points she
            brings to the discussion are her account of the highly porous stone used in the
            building, which had to be carefully prepared to receive the paint that covered most
            building interiors of the period (287), and her reference to the enveloping of the
            interior in soot after a coal heater was installed in 1893 (288), which undoubtedly
            contributed to the darkened interior that some modern commentators remember with
            nostalgia as "medieval." Cohen reasonably argues that the restoration did not make use
            of other technologies available, including digital modeling, with the result that the
            conserved interior no longer allows "unmediated access" to the archaeology of the
            building. (294) On the other hand, Cohen observes that the renovated interior surface
            preserves the building from the damaging effects of water and salt (294), and "does
            offer a better semblance of how the building might have looked when it was freshly
            completed in the Middle Ages" (293). She also notes that the intervention made available
            important new discoveries about the construction and embellishment of the medieval
            building (292), improved the effect of the window illumination (293-294) and rendered
            the building "respectfully clean and well kept" (294), not a small contribution in a
            building that serves as a place of worship, and not, as is sometimes implied, a museum
            or a laboratory. The many factors Cohen raises move the conversation about the
            controversial restoration of Chartres Cathedral forward productively and enlarge on the
            potential gains and losses from any such intervention.</p>
        <p>There are many wonderful studies within Feltman and Thompson's <italic>Long
                Lives</italic>, as this review can only begin to suggest, with contributions by both
            well-known scholars and scholars from whom we will hear more in the future. Strong and
            helpful documentation is provided in individual bibliographies that follow each chapter.
            There is some unevenness in the individual contributions, which in this volume takes the
            form of chapters that do not rise sufficiently beyond the particulars of their own case
            studies. But my most serious complaint is the quality of the reproductions, especially
            surprising in a volume of this price. A number of the black and white photographs within
            the chapters are too dark to convey information or fully complement the visual analyses
            offered (for example, Figs. 4.2, 4.5, 7.1, 8.1, 9.1, 9.6, 10.5, and 14.1), and the
            sixteen color plates are not much better. This is indeed a sad note on which to conclude
            this review of Feltman and Thompson's anthology, a work that admirably enlarges the
            scope of the study of medieval works and the ways we conceive of them.</p>
        <p>--------</p>
        <p>Notes:</p>
        <p>1. Michel Pastoureau, "'Programme': histoire d'un mot, histoire d'un concept," in
                <italic>Le programme: une notion pertinente en histoire de l'art medieval</italic>?,
            eds. Jean-Marie Guillouët and Claudia Rabel,Cahiers du Léopold d'Or, 12 (Paris, 2011),
            17-25, is an important addition to this literature because he theorizes awareness of the
            concept of change and enrichment over time in medieval programs by turning to authors
            such as Abbot Suger of Saint-Denis (<italic>pace</italic> Trachtenberg, who focuses on
            Alberti).</p>
        <p>2. The subject of a provocative intervention by Jennifer Borland and Martha Easton,
            "Integrated Pasts: Glencairn Museum and Hammond Castle," <italic>Gesta</italic> 57, no.
            1 (2018): 95-118.</p>
        <p>3. Her chapter provides an interesting contrast to her earlier publication, "Out of
            Egypt: Inventing the Black Madonna of Le Puy in Text and image," <italic>Studies in
                Iconography</italic> 37 (2016): 1-29 because the <italic>Long Lives</italic>
            anthology allows her to develop different issues around this fascinating work.</p>
        <p>4. Her example in n. 49, p. 43 now has a new link:<ext-link
                xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
                xlink:href="https://archives.cantal.fr/rechercher/iconographie/photographies-cartes-postales-affiches-plans-documents-figures?detail=2570205"
                >https://archives.cantal.fr/rechercher/iconographie/photographies-cartes-postales-affiches-plans-documents-figures?detail=2570205</ext-link>.</p>
        <p>5. To her extensive documentation, I would add Madeline H. Caviness and Jeffrey
            Hamburger, "The New Chartres: An Exchange," <italic>The New York Review of
                Books</italic>, 17 December 2014, an important rejoinder to provocateur Martin
            Fuller, who set the controversy in motion.</p>
    </body>
</article>