Árbók Hins íslenzka fornleifafélags

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Árbók Hins íslenzka fornleifafélags - 01.01.1999, Qupperneq 103

Árbók Hins íslenzka fornleifafélags - 01.01.1999, Qupperneq 103
ÚTSKURÐUR OG LÍKNESKJUSMÍÐ ÚRTRÉ 107 Christian period and is in Late Viking styles (Late Jelling, also known as Mammen, and Ringerike). All the fragments have probably come from churches (figs. 1-6). Nordic wood-carving was only slowly influenced by the Romanesque style. Most of the carving on surviving architectural pieces and inventory from after 1100 in Iceland is ornamental. One exception is the incised carving of figurative scenes from Bjarnastaðahlíð in Skagafjörður (figs. 7-8), but these are rnost hkely remnants from a large 12th-century wall-painting, probably originally from Hólar Cathedral - a rare example in Nordic ecclesiastical art of a Last Judgement scene of Byzantine type. These pieces are included here as carving, as all traces of pigment have disappeared and only the main carved lines have survived. Some pieces that seem to have come front stave-churches provide a glimpse into the development of Aecorative wood-carving in the Middle Ages (figs. 9-14).The dramatic scene of the fight with the dragon on the door fronr Valþjófsstaður (figs. 10-11) is comparable to a similar scene on the doorway of a Norwegian stave-church from the first half of the 13th century (fig. 12). Boards from Laufas in Eyrafjörður and from Mælifell in Skagafjörður (figs. 13 and 14) have characteristic vine-scrolls and palmette borders, which can hardly be earlier than about 1260. Carved architectural fragments froni the 14th and 15th centuries (figs. 15-18) reflect various phases of Romanesque, while in a class of its own on account of the Gothic decoration on the front is a German chest from c. 1400, which stood in Skálholt Cathedral (fig. 19). On the whole the Romanesque style lasted for a surprisingly long time in Icelandic ornamental carving. Part of the back of a chair or bench from Skagafjörður (fig. 20) and two richly decorated chairs from Grund in Eyjafjörður (figs. 21-22) are further evidence for this, as the two chairs can almost certainly be dated to c. 1550. The decoration is in Romanesque style with some traces of Gothic. This is not the case with figurative sculpture in the medieval period. Only a few of the surviving figures are Romanesque (figs.23-24); all the rest are Gothic.While the decorative wood-carving is based on an ancient Nordic tradition and was gradually taken into use by the Catholic church, the figurative sculpture does not seem to have any connection with the depictions of the old pagan gods.The influence came frorn abroad, as a part of the new religion, and was aimed at church use from the very beginning. It was characterised by an increasing importation from professional workshops abroad. The figures of Christ on the crucifixes, the Madonnas and the other saints differ from much of decorative carving in their surface treatment. After they were carved, they were covered with a chalk ground and given a polychrome finish. The figure of Christ has survived from only one of the Romanesque wooden crucifixes (fig. 23). It appears to be Icelandic work dating to the first half of the 12th century. A Madonna from an unidentified Icelandic church (fig. 24) is representative of the Late Romanesque figurative style. It seems to have been made in Sweden and is dated to a little after 1200. Of the Gothic pieces some are Icelandic, such as a crucifix from Húsavik church (fig. 25 and Isl. þjóðm. V, p. 130), while others are of uncertain origin, and many were no doubt imported from abroad. Many surviving figures have probably come from altar-shrines showing a single saint or froni altarpieces with several figures. In some cases the altarpiece itself has also survived (e.g. figs. 27, 29, 30, 32-33). Among the single-figure altar-shrines, those devoted to the
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Árbók Hins íslenzka fornleifafélags

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