jeff zimmer - exploring ambiguity in illuminated glass
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Dance of Death Window, Münster of Bern 11/04/2010
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The Dance of Death is an absolute favourite theme of mine.  It is a lyrical, haunting, horrible and humourous allegory of the universality and inevitablity of death, across all ages and walks of life.  These photos are of the Totentanz window in Bern Münster.

The information I've found so far suggests that the window was made around 1450.  However, some of the close-ups clearly show dates of 1917 & 1918 (and the glass is in too good condition for it to be 550 years old....).  It is popularly believed that the Dance of Death became popular in the mid-15th Century, following a chain of catastrophes across Europe - so perhaps these were re-imagined in the 20th Century as a response to World War I?  I'll research further and update this post.

In the meantime, I hope you enjoy these macabre pieces......


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Danse Macabre/Dance of Death 05/12/2010
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Again from the pages of Vidimus comes another great morbid panel, this one depicting a Danse Macabre, or Dance of Death from St. Andrew's Church, Norwich.  In it a skeletal figure dances with a bishop reminding the viewer that, regardless of rank, death awaits us all.

Image © Mike Dixon

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Death Shoots a Donor 01/15/2010
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Judith Schaechter turned me on to this English gem, which also features in the fantastic "Death in England: An Illustrated History" edited by Peter C. Jupp and Clare Gittings.


It was commissioned by Henry Williams, vicar of Stratford on Avon, in 1500, showing the vicar himself kneeling in prayer being shot at by Death kneeling in a coffin.

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‘By the Grace of God, a Guardian Angel wrests the soul of a man from the world and the devil’ 12/14/2009
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From the pages of Vidimus comes this intriguing little roundel.  The theology of it (salvation comes through belief and grace, not via indulgences and priests) would have been quite radical in its day.  But I love the literal tug of war and the hermaphroditic devil!  (Though we can't see its genitals, I'm assuming from the prominent breasts that the artist was following in the tradition of depicting the devil as a hermaphrodite.  There's a similar depiction in the painted ceilings of the John Knox House in Edinburgh.)

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Morbid Old Glass - Paris 05/22/2009
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The panels that started my fascination with monstrous (old) stained glass......  From the small museum in Ste. Etienne du Mont, behind the Pantheon.  Not the best snaps in the world -- if anyone has any better, let me know!

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Crazy mad old glass! 05/10/2009
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So, you think of old stained glass & you think of proper saints, right?  WRONG! There was some mad stuff made.  I intend to keep a compendium of bizarre old glass -- the more lurid and morbid the better!

First up is this odd wee roundel in the Burrell Collection, Glasgow.  St. Notkur Balbulous beating the devil, who came to tempt him while in the form of a dog.  How exactly the devil, especially in that pose, was tempting the saint, is not explained.

The saint's robes are stunningly black -- but look at that lurid devil dog!  A contorted pose and unlikely anatomy. Green enamels painted on the back and blue and silver stained spots on the front give a subtle parallax shift.


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