Tag Archives: John Thornton

John Thornton’s Great East Window at York Minster (1408)

The last time my fam­i­ly and I vis­it­ed York, we wan­dered out­side York Min­ster but our indige­nous fru­gal­i­ty (being our­selves of York­shire soil) baulked at the then-recent­ly intro­duced admis­sion fee of £10 to go inside. If you too vis­it York and find your­self in sim­i­lar fru­gal mode, let me advise you to take a hold of your­self, with an option­al shake, and remind your­self nev­er to put filthy lucre ahead of artis­tic splen­dour. For York Min­ster, as well as in itself being one of the great goth­ic cathe­drals of north­ern Europe, and thus replete with the resplen­dent archi­tec­tur­al beau­ty for which such cathe­drals are known, con­tains also the largest expanse of medieval stained glass in the world, includ­ing the sub­ject of today’s blog, the Great East Win­dow.

Some call it England’s Sis­tine Chapel, and indeed, had it been done in paint, instead of in glass, it might well be con­sid­ered a rival to Michelangelo’s mas­ter­piece in Rome. How­ev­er, stained glass has always fall­en on the wrong side of that divid­ing line between fine and applied art, and thus it is seen pri­mar­i­ly as a craft. Let’s not fall for that one. The great east win­dow in York Min­ster is one of the tri­umphant achieve­ments of the Mid­dle Ages: 1,690sqft of art­ful­ly exe­cut­ed stained glass, recount­ing the sto­ry of the world from Cre­ation to Apoc­a­lypse.

It was in 1405 that John Thorn­ton of Coven­try was com­mis­sioned to glaze the east end of the Lady Chapel. A copy of Thornton’s con­tract for the win­dow sur­vives, spec­i­fy­ing that he was to draw all the car­toons, and paint a large num­ber of the indi­vid­ual pan­els. For all this Thorn­ton was paid a total of £56, and con­tract­ed to com­plete the job inside three years. For doing so, Thorn­ton received a £10 bonus, and proud­ly put the date of com­ple­tion – 1408 – at the very apex of the win­dow.

Doubt­less Thorn­ton had behind him a team of glaziers, hired local­ly or brought with him from Coven­try, but the paint­ing on the glass would pri­mar­i­ly have been his. It was Thornton’s task too to turn the commissioner’s high­ly the­o­log­i­cal and pre­cise con­cept into a work of art. And this he self-evi­dent­ly did.

While much medieval glass is dom­i­nat­ed by reds and blues, John Thorn­ton had a pen­chant for yel­low as his base colour. In addi­tion, the paint­ing in Thornton’s faces had greater real­ism (and metic­u­lous­ly drawn hair) than his rivals. The typ­i­cal Thorn­ton face is sen­si­tive, with eyes down-turned, a small mouth and a some­what promi­nent nose. What Thorn­ton was pio­neer­ing in his glass­work was the Euro­pean style – new to Eng­land – known as Inter­na­tion­al Goth­ic. It is ele­gant­ly stylised work; for sure, the York com­mis­sion­ers were buy­ing cut­ting edge art, and, of course, good glass can’t be made with­out a cut­ting edge.