Funerary spaces, habitats and territories art the beginning of the 2nd millenium between Caen and the sea (original) (raw)

Echoes of Liminal Spaces. Revisiting the Late Mediaeval 'Enclosed Gardens' of the Low Countries. (A Hermeneutical Contribution to Chthonic Artistic Expression), in “Antwerp Royal Museum Annual", 2012 (appeared in 2014/15), p. 9-45.

During the late Middle Ages a unique type of ‘mixed media’ recycled and remnant art arose in houses of religious women in the Low Countries: Enclosed Gardens. These are retables, sometimes with painted side panels, the central section filled not only with narrative sculpture, but also with all sorts of trinkets and hand-worked textiles. Adornments include relics, wax medallions, gemstones set in silver, pilgrimage souvenirs, parchment banderoles, flowers made from textiles with silk thread, semi-precious stones, pearls and quilling (a decorative technique using rolled paper). The ensemble is an impressive and one-of-a-kind display and presents as an intoxicating garden. In this essay the exceptional heritage of such Enclosed Gardens is interpreted from a range of approaches. The Enclosed Garden is studied as a symbol of paradise and mystical union, as the sanctuary of interiority, as the sublimation of the sensorium (in particular the sense of smell), as a typical gendered product, and as a centre of psycho-energetic creative processes.

Granier (G.), Lattard (A.), Mocci (F.), Bartette (T.), Cenzon-Salvayre (C.), Huguet (C.), 2018. The role of a funerary space in the construction of a ritual landscape : the domainal necropolis of Richeaume XIII, near Aquae Sextiae (France).

In Nizzo V. (dir.) : Archeologia e antropologia della morte. 2. Corpi, relazioni e azioni : il paesaggio del rito. Atti del 3° Incontro Internazionale di Studi di Antropologia e Archeologia a confronto, Roma, École française de Rome – Stadio di Domiziano, 20- 22 Maggio 2015. Fondazione Dia Cultura/E.S.S. Editorial Service System, Rome, 2018, pp. 713-722.

Peregrinations: Journal of Medieval Art and Architecture (Volume 1, Issue 3)

2017

We outline the methods that we used to create a GIS-based map of Barking Abbey, a British nunnery founded c. 666 and razed in 1539. This article includes images of a GIS map based on Sir Alfred Clapham’s 1911 groundplan of the abbey (and the map layers) as well as a link to a WebMap. We hope the map and methods discussion will be useful to humanists who are relatively new to the value of GIS (and the use of Google Earth in georectification) for studying devotional practice, liturgical performance, and the conceptualization of physical space in religious life. We also suggest how this map may be used for further research on Barking Abbey and the implications of mapping for other sites with scant physical remains for which a full archeological survey may not be feasible.

Aristocratic Landscape : The Spatial ideology of the Medieval Aristocracy

Lund Studies in Historical Archaeology, 2006

Once I had finished my PhD, the question inevitably arose, what am I supposed to do now? In my case the answer was easy, I had to go back to my job at the museum in Växjö, from which I had been on study leave during the four years when I wrote my PhD. But I couldn't really drop the subject of my thesis. When it finally was finished I was convinced that it would have been more interesting if I had done it in another way. This is the background to the post-doc project that is presented in this book. It has as starting point thoughts and ideas that I never discussed in my thesis. It is also an attempt to conduct a study in historical archaeology on a European level.