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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • March 4, 1865
  • Page 2
  • ORNAMENTED AND STAINED GLASS.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, March 4, 1865: Page 2

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    Article ORNAMENTED AND STAINED GLASS. ← Page 2 of 4 →
Page 2

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Ornamented And Stained Glass.

The union of stained glass with architecture has ahvays been most close ; the alterations in the one have been accompanied bj r alterations in the other . The greater freedom of design and approach to naturalism in the sculptures and Avail decorations of the fourteenth century may also be traced in

the stained glass of that period . There is no finer example of Second-Pointed glass than that in the chapel of Merton College , Oxford . A range of subjects under short canopies are placed upon Avhite glass , on which is traced the most exquisite linear ornament ; ancl this range of

highly-coloured subjects is carried entirely round the building , forming a glorious string-course of jewellery . During the period of Third-Pointed architecture , stained windows Avere still retained as the most

necessary enrichment . A new style of design , however , more in character Avith the alterations in the style of architecture , Avas introduced . Tho mosaic system of construction , and the rich colouring of the two preceding centuries , was laid aside , to be reproduced in our OAVU clay . The system of

firing and leading the glass was of course retained ; but the Avhole effort of the fifteenth century artists Avas to produce a silvery effect of colouring . There was an excessive proportion of Avhite glass in all their Avindows , and the use of yelloAV stain on Avhite glass in all their windoAvsand the use of yelloAV

, stain ou white glass was the principal aim of their colourists . We must do them the justice to say that the manipulation Avas most painstaking , amounting in many instances , especially in the ¦ earl y part of the century , to microscopic care . There is a fine and well-coloured Third-Pointed

AvmdoAv in the Beauchamp Chapel , Warwick , but it is an exceptional Avork . It Avas in this , the fifteenth century , that Gothic architecture , after living in strength for ten centuries , began its decline , and toAvards the commencement of the sixteenth century altogether disappeared ; and stained

glass , as a decorative art , shared , like a faithful servant , its decline of fortune . In the sixteenth century there arose in Germany a iieAv style of glass-painting , named by Winston the Cinque-cento style , from the introduction of Italian or Renaissance feeling into the

ornamental parts of the AvindoAvs . The Italians , although' loving colour , alAvays preferred it of the opaque sort , mosaics and frescoes , and rarely , if ever , filled their AvindoAvs Avith stained glass . They , howeA er , set the fashion to the world , in the sixteenth century , of Palladian architecture ;

aud their ornamentation materially influenced the designs of northern AvindoAvs . The church of Saint Jacques , at Liege , and the chapel of the Miraculous Sacrament at Brussels , contain the most marked and best-knoAvn painted wincloAvs of foreign sixteenth century Avork . They both seem

to be tho Avork of the same hands , the ornamental work , at least , bearing the same detestable character . The Avindows of King's College ,

Cambridge , are the best English productions of the sixteenth century ; ancl those in the apse of Lichfield Cathedral , the east windows of St . George ' s , Hanover-square , and of Fairford Church , Gloucestershire , are the best knoAvn foreign works in England . HoAvever good in drawing , and

however skilful in manipulation the works of the sixteenth century may be , there is but little , if any , consistency between them and the architecture , which Avas treated as a mere framework for their exhibition . The productions of the seventeenth and part of

the eighteenth century were clumsy attempts at picture-making , and are not worth speaking of . The dawn of the reA'ival of the art of glass-painting in England AA as about 1750 . Sir Joshua Pteynolds ' s AvindoAv in New College , Oxford , painted by Jarvisof Yorkin 1780 is the type

, , , of eighteenth century work : it is painted with semi-transparent enamel , on squares of AA'hite glass . There is a little yelloAV stain , but no coloured glass , if I remember rightly . For nearly seA enty years this attempt at transparent picturemaking prevailed ; the introduction of raw

potmetal blue , and a little ruby glass , being an occasional improvement . Ruby glass in 1820 was so prized that in some shops it Avas AATapped up in flannel for careful keeping ; it can now be bought for Is . a foot .

The introduction of stained glass Avindows similar in character to those of the thirteenth and fourteenth century is due to Pngin , AVIIO stirred up the few glass-painters who , previous to this time , Avere engaged in the production of coloured AvindoAvs for staircases , hall-lamps , and , as an

occasional higher fli ght , a church window . He gave commissions for windows to each of them in turn , but eventually induced Mr . Hardman , of Birmingham , then a metal-Avorker , to establish a business of glass-painting in connection Avith his metal-works . I need scarcely add that from small

beginnings a most extensiA r e business has for a long time been carried on there . It is due to Pngin's memory to state , that his great energy and liberal dealing are new frequently spoken of among the surviving glasspainters of his time . Mr . Willement Avas engaged upon the same pursuit at the same period , but his AA'orks Avere principally heraldic .

The manufacture of stained AvindoAvs , as now practised , resembles that of the fourteenth more than of the thirteenth century ; but it has been greatly facilitated by the use of the diamond for cutting the glass , aud by the use of iron kilns in place of those of clay .

This is the history of the production of a modem stained Avindow , and it Avill apply to ninety cases out of a hundred . The person AVIIO wants one usually goes about as he AA ould for a tomb-stone , and for a similar purpose . The best advice is obtained as to AA'here it can be had , or he has seen some window that has met his fancy , and he goes

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1865-03-04, Page 2” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 13 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_04031865/page/2/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
GRAND LODGE. Article 1
ORNAMENTED AND STAINED GLASS. Article 1
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 4
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 8
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 8
GRAND LODGE. Article 8
METROPOLITAN. Article 11
PROVINCIAL. Article 14
MARK MASONRY. Article 15
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 16
CHANNEL ISLANDS. Article 16
INDIA. Article 16
Obituary. Article 17
RAILWAY PASSENGERS' ASSURANCE COMPANY. Article 17
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 18
THE WEEK. Article 18
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Ornamented And Stained Glass.

The union of stained glass with architecture has ahvays been most close ; the alterations in the one have been accompanied bj r alterations in the other . The greater freedom of design and approach to naturalism in the sculptures and Avail decorations of the fourteenth century may also be traced in

the stained glass of that period . There is no finer example of Second-Pointed glass than that in the chapel of Merton College , Oxford . A range of subjects under short canopies are placed upon Avhite glass , on which is traced the most exquisite linear ornament ; ancl this range of

highly-coloured subjects is carried entirely round the building , forming a glorious string-course of jewellery . During the period of Third-Pointed architecture , stained windows Avere still retained as the most

necessary enrichment . A new style of design , however , more in character Avith the alterations in the style of architecture , Avas introduced . Tho mosaic system of construction , and the rich colouring of the two preceding centuries , was laid aside , to be reproduced in our OAVU clay . The system of

firing and leading the glass was of course retained ; but the Avhole effort of the fifteenth century artists Avas to produce a silvery effect of colouring . There was an excessive proportion of Avhite glass in all their Avindows , and the use of yelloAV stain on Avhite glass in all their windoAvsand the use of yelloAV

, stain ou white glass was the principal aim of their colourists . We must do them the justice to say that the manipulation Avas most painstaking , amounting in many instances , especially in the ¦ earl y part of the century , to microscopic care . There is a fine and well-coloured Third-Pointed

AvmdoAv in the Beauchamp Chapel , Warwick , but it is an exceptional Avork . It Avas in this , the fifteenth century , that Gothic architecture , after living in strength for ten centuries , began its decline , and toAvards the commencement of the sixteenth century altogether disappeared ; and stained

glass , as a decorative art , shared , like a faithful servant , its decline of fortune . In the sixteenth century there arose in Germany a iieAv style of glass-painting , named by Winston the Cinque-cento style , from the introduction of Italian or Renaissance feeling into the

ornamental parts of the AvindoAvs . The Italians , although' loving colour , alAvays preferred it of the opaque sort , mosaics and frescoes , and rarely , if ever , filled their AvindoAvs Avith stained glass . They , howeA er , set the fashion to the world , in the sixteenth century , of Palladian architecture ;

aud their ornamentation materially influenced the designs of northern AvindoAvs . The church of Saint Jacques , at Liege , and the chapel of the Miraculous Sacrament at Brussels , contain the most marked and best-knoAvn painted wincloAvs of foreign sixteenth century Avork . They both seem

to be tho Avork of the same hands , the ornamental work , at least , bearing the same detestable character . The Avindows of King's College ,

Cambridge , are the best English productions of the sixteenth century ; ancl those in the apse of Lichfield Cathedral , the east windows of St . George ' s , Hanover-square , and of Fairford Church , Gloucestershire , are the best knoAvn foreign works in England . HoAvever good in drawing , and

however skilful in manipulation the works of the sixteenth century may be , there is but little , if any , consistency between them and the architecture , which Avas treated as a mere framework for their exhibition . The productions of the seventeenth and part of

the eighteenth century were clumsy attempts at picture-making , and are not worth speaking of . The dawn of the reA'ival of the art of glass-painting in England AA as about 1750 . Sir Joshua Pteynolds ' s AvindoAv in New College , Oxford , painted by Jarvisof Yorkin 1780 is the type

, , , of eighteenth century work : it is painted with semi-transparent enamel , on squares of AA'hite glass . There is a little yelloAV stain , but no coloured glass , if I remember rightly . For nearly seA enty years this attempt at transparent picturemaking prevailed ; the introduction of raw

potmetal blue , and a little ruby glass , being an occasional improvement . Ruby glass in 1820 was so prized that in some shops it Avas AATapped up in flannel for careful keeping ; it can now be bought for Is . a foot .

The introduction of stained glass Avindows similar in character to those of the thirteenth and fourteenth century is due to Pngin , AVIIO stirred up the few glass-painters who , previous to this time , Avere engaged in the production of coloured AvindoAvs for staircases , hall-lamps , and , as an

occasional higher fli ght , a church window . He gave commissions for windows to each of them in turn , but eventually induced Mr . Hardman , of Birmingham , then a metal-Avorker , to establish a business of glass-painting in connection Avith his metal-works . I need scarcely add that from small

beginnings a most extensiA r e business has for a long time been carried on there . It is due to Pngin's memory to state , that his great energy and liberal dealing are new frequently spoken of among the surviving glasspainters of his time . Mr . Willement Avas engaged upon the same pursuit at the same period , but his AA'orks Avere principally heraldic .

The manufacture of stained AvindoAvs , as now practised , resembles that of the fourteenth more than of the thirteenth century ; but it has been greatly facilitated by the use of the diamond for cutting the glass , aud by the use of iron kilns in place of those of clay .

This is the history of the production of a modem stained Avindow , and it Avill apply to ninety cases out of a hundred . The person AVIIO wants one usually goes about as he AA ould for a tomb-stone , and for a similar purpose . The best advice is obtained as to AA'here it can be had , or he has seen some window that has met his fancy , and he goes

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