Medieval Art & Architecture: How to speak its language
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Medieval Art & Architecture: How to speak its language

  • ALL AGES

Our churches and cathedrals are packed with symbols that make much better sense if you understand the meanings and associations behind them.

By The Arts Society

Date and time

Friday, June 27 · 10:45am - 3pm GMT+1.

Location

Covent Garden

20 Bedford Street Covent Garden London WC2E 9HP United Kingdom

Refund Policy

Refunds up to 7 days before event

Agenda

11:00 AM - 11:50 AM

How to 'Read' Great Churches

Dr Jonathan Foyle

12:10 PM - 1:00 PM

A Paradise Garden: the Hidden Meanings of Medieval Flowers

Dr Jonathan Foyle

1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Lunch break

2:00 PM - 2:50 PM

The Nature of the Beast: Understanding Fabulous Animals in Medieval Art

Dr Jonathan Foyle

2:50 PM - 3:00 PM

Questions

About this event

  • Event lasts 4 hours 15 minutes
  • ALL AGES
  • No venue parking

Dr Jonathan Foyle is a world renowned architectural historian who, amongst his other accomplishments, has authored seven volumes on great cathedrals and castles.

In this 3-lecture study day, he draws on a 30-year career in the historic environment to offer in-depth and fresh analyses of architecture and the arts, especially their all-important symbolism, through which we can better understand what their makers are trying to communicate.

How to 'Read' Great Churches

Britain is peppered with medieval churches, great and small: they are some of our most familiar buildings. But when we stop and look at them carefully, we can begin to decipher messages and meanings in form, detail and even situation. This talk combines much original work gained in writing six volumes on English churches. It presents an essential guide on how to think about these enigmatic and deeply narrative places, so that their makers can better communicate with us across the centuries.


A Paradise Garden: the Hidden Meanings of Medieval Flowers

Our churches and cathedrals are packed with symbols that make much better sense if you understand the meanings and associations behind them. The speaker presents a guide to how to see through medieval eyes, using manuscripts and paintings to emphasise the world-view that saw order and meaning expressed through the colours, numbers, shapes and behaviour of plants and animals. Once you see the logic of the language, there's no going back!


The Nature of the Beast: Understanding Fabulous Animals in Medieval Art

Medieval bestiaries are wondrously colourful worlds, blending fact with fiction, morality with mythology. They represent an understanding of the physical world, but also fulfilled the need for symbolic creatures to supplement biblical stories, offering a wide array of noble or crude behaviours with which to compare ourselves. What happened if you chased a bonnacon? What was a beaver's superpower? What did owls mean? And how did animals graduate from bestiaries into the realm of heraldry? In the course of an hour, we'll explore all these and more.

Frequently asked questions

Access to the building

There is one small step from the street into the building and the lecture hall is on the ground floor.

Refunds

Refunds may be given up to 7 days before the event, but the booking fee portion of the ticket price (£3.88) is non-refundable.

What time does it start?

Registration is from 10.45hrs onwards. The lectures will start promptly at 11.00hrs

Refreshments

Coffee and lunch are not included in the ticket price. There are many coffee shops and places to eat near the venue. There will be a 20-minute coffee break around 11.50hrs and an hour's break for lunch at 13.00hrs. We regret that you may not bring your own food into the venue.

Can I bring my own food?

You may not bring food and drink into the venue after the kitchen opens at 11.00hrs. There is a small bar upstairs but, when busy, the kitchen may struggle to provide a large number of lunches in the time allocated. You can bring a drink in with you at the start of the day.

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