Martin M. Miles' photos with the keyword: dancing

Rosheim - Église Saints-Pierre-et-Paul

10 Jun 2011 123
The construction of the "Église Saints-Pierre-et-Paul" started around 1150. The basilica-style church has the classical layout of a latin cross and is known for the carvings. Size and the quality of some of them are really breathtaking. There are different artistic styles here. I seems like four master-carvers were given a chance, to show their talents and so they used this as a showcase. This is the most strangest and most cryptic corbel I found. It is interesting, as in the middle is a scale model of a pillar from the nave. The model is a little simplified, but as the capitals here are very specific, it can only be one of the pillars here. So the corbel is a kind of "mirror" under the vault, reflecting what is happening down below. In front of that pillar are two persons, holding hands. The figures have very long arms - and the gesture of "holding hands" forms the letter "W". Below this "W" are the other arms (forming a inverted "V") - and I cannot find out, what they are grabbing. Maybe each others knee. Are these persons dancing? Then the left one would probably be female. Are they wrestling? Or is this another form of "beardpulling" - without beards? In this case both would be male. - And whatever it may be - could that happen down in the nave? From the style this corbel differs greatly from others inside Saints-Pierre-et-Pau, artisticly and thematically. This corbel tells a story - and the story has to do with very long arms/hands... Sorry for the bad quality of the photo..

Biron - Saint-Eutrope / Notre-Dame

12 Jul 2013 163
Notre-Dame is the parish church of Biron, a village 6kms east of Pons. Once the church was dedicated to Saint-Eutrope as a relic of "Saint Eutropius of Saintes", who came to the region to evangelize the Gauls in the 3rd century, was kept here. Erected within the 12th century the church got fortified soon after. During the 15th/16th century it got enlarged, the apse got vaulted and a chapel was added. Sculpted capitals can be seen high up in the dim light near the apse. Compared to the masterly carved works all over the Saintonge (and here outside as well), these carvings are rough and clumsy. A man seated left, a woman (dancing) a snake at her belly under a tree, animals to the right... Another jungle-theme?