Part 1 (1/2)

A Book About Stained & Painted Gla.s.s.

by Lewis F. Day.

PREFACE.

A stained gla.s.s window is itself the best possible ill.u.s.tration of the difference it makes whether we look at a thing from this side or from that. Goethe used this particular image in one of his little parables, comparing poems to painted windows, dark and dull from the market-place, bright with colour and alive with meaning only when we have crossed the threshold of the church.

I may claim to have entered the sanctuary, and not irreverently. My earliest training in design was in the workshops of artists in stained gla.s.s. For many years I worked exclusively at gla.s.s design, and for over a quarter of a century I have spent great part of my leisure in hunting gla.s.s all Europe over.

This book has grown out of my experience. It makes no claim to learnedness. It tells only what the windows have told me, or what I understood them to say. I have gone to gla.s.s to get pleasure out of it, to learn something from it, to find out the way it was done, and why it was done so, and what might yet perhaps be done. Anything apart from that did not so much interest me. Those, therefore, who desire minuter and more precise historic information must consult the works of Winston, Mr. Westlake, and the many continental authorities, with whose learned writings this more practical, and, in a sense, popular, volume does not enter into any sort of compet.i.tion.

My point of view is that of art and workmans.h.i.+p, or, more precisely speaking, workmans.h.i.+p and art, workmans.h.i.+p being naturally the beginning and root of art. We are workmen first and artists afterwards--perhaps.

What I have tried to do is this: In the first place (Book I.), I set out to trace the course of _workmans.h.i.+p_, to follow the technique of the workman from the twelfth century to the seventeenth, from mosaic to painting, from archaism to pictorial accomplishment; and to indicate at what cost of perhaps more decorative qualities the later masterpieces of gla.s.s painting were bought.

In the second place (Book II.), I have endeavoured to show the course of _design_ in gla.s.s, from the earliest Mediaeval window to the latest gla.s.s picture of the Renaissance.

Finally (Book III.), I have set apart for separate discussion questions not in the direct line either of design or workmans.h.i.+p, or which, if taken by the way, would have hindered the narrative and confused the issue.

The rather lengthy chapter on ”_Style_” is addressed to that large number of persons who, knowing as yet nothing about the subject, may want _data_ by which to form some idea as to the period of a window when they see it: the postscript more nearly concerns the designer and the worker in gla.s.s.

In all this I have tried to put personality as much as possible aside, and to tell my story faithfully and without conscious bias. But I make no claim to impartiality, as the judge upon the bench understands it. We take up art or law according to our temperament. I can pretend to judge only as one interested, to be impartial only as an artist may.

LEWIS F. DAY.

13, MECKLENBURGH SQUARE, LONDON.

_January 29th, 1897._

_NOTE IN REFERENCE TO ILl.u.s.tRATIONS._

_Theoretically the ill.u.s.trations to a book about windows should be in colour. Practically coloured ill.u.s.trations of stained gla.s.s are out of the question, as all who appreciate its quality well know. It may be possible, although it has hardly proved so as yet, to print adequate representations of coloured windows, but only at a cost which would defeat the end here in view._

_The_ EFFECT _of gla.s.s is best suggested by process renderings of photographs from actual windows or from very careful water-colour drawings, such as those very kindly placed at my disposal by Mr. T. M.

Rooke (pages 128, 159, 337) and Mr. John R. Clayton (pages 51, 74, 98, 186, 207, 252, 286, 304, 342), an artist whose studio has been the nursery of a whole generation of gla.s.s designers._

_Details of_ DESIGN _are often better seen in the reproductions of tracings or slight pen-drawings, little more than diagrams it may be, but done to ill.u.s.trate a point. That is the intention throughout, to ill.u.s.trate what is said, not simply to beautify the book._

_The direction of the pen-lines gives, wherever it was possible, a key to the colour scheme. Red, that is to say, is represented by vertical lines, blue by horizontal, yellow by dots, and so on, according to heraldic custom._

BOOK I.