New exhibitions at Pannonhalma
Medieval History

New exhibitions at Pannonhalma


For several decades now, the Benedictine Archabbey at Pannonhalma has also served as an important exhibition venue. Perhaps most memorable for medievalists was the 2001 exhibition dedicated to Benedictines in Medieval Hungary, and titled Paradisum plantavit. For a long time, there has been a permenant exhibition space in the abbey as well, but only a very small part of the abbey's collection was on view. This year, a new abbey museum and visitor center opened at Pannonhalma, in the former manor building belonging to the abbey. This museum is the home of a new permanent exhibition of the abbey, and includes an exhibition of medieval stone carvings from Pannonhalma, as well as a good selection from the collections of the abbey. The new space created an opportunity to display some elements of the medieval building which were previously not visible, such as elements from the 13th century cloisters of the abbey (which was rebuilt in the late 15th century). The collections of the abbey include goldsmith works, important manuscripts, a good ensemble of paintings, sculptures and liturgical objects, among other artworks. The new exhibition was arranged by Imre Takács, noted medieval art historian and the curator of major exhibition at Pannonhalma in 1996 and 2001. This collection can be browsed online as well - in a database which at the moment seems to be available only in Hungarian.

Stone carvings from Pannonhalma at the new museum

Fragments of the 13th century cloister

In 2014, visitors also get a chance to visit two intertwined exhibitions. Since March 2014 the exhibition Icons and Relics: Veneration of Images between East and West (March 21 ? November 11,2014) can be visited in the in the ?old? exhibition hall of the monastery. Another exhibition opened in July in the newly opened Abbey Manor Visitor Centre and Museum. Titled Image and Christianity: Visual Media in the Middle Ages (July 10 ? November 11, 2014), which focuses on western European liturgical art. To cite the curator, Péter Bokody: "The aim of the exhibitions is to show to the viewer the various forms and media of image-worship in medieval Christianity. The exhibition Icons and Relics presents the intertwined history of image-worship in the East and West through a comparison of the cult of images and the cult of relics, together with the genesis of the painted panel. The exhibition Image and Christianity focuses on the same development from the perspective of the visual media in the Middle Ages, where the spread of the painted panel in the West is interpreted in the context of mosaics, stained glass, murals and book illumination. The point of intersection between the two is the Latin Sack of Constantinople in 1204, since both the intensified forms of image-worship and the visual medium of the painted panel became central in Western Christianity after that."

The exhibition "Icons and relics"

Glimpse into the exhibition "Image and Christianity"
In addition to important loans from the major museums of Hungary, the exhibitions also features a number of international loans (primarily from Austria and Croatia), providing a nice overview medieval artworks in the service of liturgy. The highlights of the exhibition Icons and Relics are the 12th century head reliquary of Saint Coloman (Benedictine Abbey, Melk), and 14th century reliquaries from Zadar. In the exhibition Image and Christianity the various medieval visual media are presented by 12th century mosaics (Museo Torcello, Torcello), 15th century stained glass windows (Universalmuseum Joanneum, Graz), 14th century fresco fragments (Museum of Fine Arts, Budapest), 15th century painted panels (Hungarian National Gallery, Budapest), and 11th-15th century codices, as well as ivory carvings and other works. 


The two exhibitions are accompanied by a joint bilingual (Hungarian-English) catalogue entitled Image and Christianity: Visual Media in the Middle Ages, which contains the reproductions and descriptions of the exhibited works and studies discussing the questions of mosaic technique, book illumination and the cult of relics. The catalogue contains studies by an excellent group of authors, as can be seen from the contents listed below. The editor has also made the introduction available online.

Péter Bokody (ed.). Image and Christianity: Visual Media in the Middle Ages. Exhibition catalog. Pannonhalma: Pannonhalma Abbey, 2014.

Introduction

Varga Mátyás (OSB, Pannonhalma)
The Sacred Image: on the Gaining and the Loss of Images in Western Christianity

Klaniczay Gábor (Central European University, Budapest) 
Cult of Relics in the Middle Ages

Julia Bokody (Central European University, Budapest) 
The Fourth Crusade and the Looting of Constantinople


Colum Hourihane (Index of Christian Art, Princeton) 
The Power of the Image in Prayer and Devotion


Marina Vicelja ? Matija?i? (University of Rijeka, Rijeka) 
Mosaics and Church Decoration: The Cathedral in Pore?

Endr?di Gábor (Eötvös Loránd Tudományegyetem, Budapest) 
De materialibus ad inmaterialia excitans: Commentary on the Stained Glass Windows by Suger, Abbot of Saint-Denis

Bokody Péter (Plymouth University, Plymouth) 
Mural Painting as a Medium: Technique, Representation and Liturgy

Szakács Béla Zsolt (Pázmány Péter Katolikus Egyetem, Budapest) 
Image and Liturgy in the Middle Ages

Laura Cleaver (Trinity College, Dublin)
Illuminated Prayer Books

Catalogue




- Cleveland Museum Of Art Unveils Two Exhibits On Medieval Art This Fall
This fall, the Cleveland Museum of Art will premiere a groundbreaking exhibition examining the role of relics and reliquaries in the development of Christianity and the visual arts. Treasures of Heaven: Saints, Relics, and Devotion in Medieval Europe...

- New Medieval Exhibition At The Hungarian National Gallery
Maria gravida, Vienna, 1409 see in high resolution I haven't had time to upload anything here for over a month - but a lot has happened in Hungary in the field of medieval art. I will try to catch up with a series of brief posts. First, I would...

- Exhibition Of Medieval Art In Cologne
Last week I had a chance to see the exhibition "Glanz und Grösse des Mittelalters" at the Schnütgen Museum in Cologne (Splendour and Glory of the Middle Ages). The new building of the Rautenstrauch-Joest-Museum provides a spacious and modern exhibition...

- Exhibitions On Medieval Fashion
Two different exhibitions, both dedicated to medieval fashion are open at the same time: one at the West Coast of America, the other one at the East Coast. First to open was the exhibition at the Morgan Library and Museum in New York City. Titled Illuminating...

- Conference And Exhibition About László Gerevich
László Gerevich, one of the eminent Hungarian archaeologists of the Middle Ages, was born 100 years ago. To commemorate, the Budapest History Museum organized a conference and an exhibition about his career. The highlight of this career was the excavation...



Medieval History








.