Gothic Artwork

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Gothic artwork started in France in the mid 12th century during the Romanesque period.
This kind of art turned into Renaissance art between the 14th and the 15th centuries.
The medium used in this kind of art include sculptures, stained glass, panel painting, fresco and illuminated manuscript.
Gothic artwork narrates both Christian and secular stories through pictures.
Initially, This kind of art consisted of sculptures crafted onto the walls of cathedrals and monasteries.
The nature of this art was topology.
They depicted both the stories of new evidence and old facts side by side.
Secular art came into focus during the formation of cities and foundation of universities.
This is because bourgeois were able to support the art.
There was no sculpture tradition in the Ille-de-France before.
Abbot Suger gave birth to this kind of sculpture when he built the Abbey at St.
Denis in France in the mid 12th century.
The sculptures were brought in the form of burgundy.
The revolutionary figures acting as columns in the Western columns which they invented, were considered as the replica for a generation of sculptures.
Gothic artwork did not appear before the 12th century.
They came to the limelight after about fifty years of this kind of architecture and paintings.
The beginning style of these paintings was abstemious.
Paintings were mainly crafted on Fresco, manuscript illumination, stained glass and panel paintings.
Fresco was used as pictorial narration craft on the cathedral wall in the Southern Europe.
In the Northern Europe, stained glass was the dominant preference during the 15th century.
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