Description
pp. 326, color photographs, ‘In this lively biography of Chartres Cathedral, Ball explores the configuration of cultural and technological factors that enabled Europe to achieve a “liberation from gravity” in the twelfth century, including the rise of scholasticism, Platonic obsessions with light and proportion, and heroic masons who “turned geometry into stone.” The accomplishments of Gothic architecture were all the more remarkable given that stonework was virtually forgotten in the West in the centuries after Rome fell. Though much of the history of Chartres Cathedral remains opaque, Balls account of its construction reveals fascinating details (such as the origins of its blue glass, likely scavenged from Roman or Byzantine sites) and evokes its raison dêtre: in an era when architecture “existed to reveal the deep design of Gods creation,” Chartres “encoded a set of symbols and relationships that mapped out the universe itself.”