- The rood
screen (also
choir screen,
chancel screen, or jubé) is a
common feature in late
medieval church architecture. It is
typically an
ornate partition...
-
interior is
lavishly decorated with art and sculpture, a very
ornate choir screen, and
walls in
bright blues and golds, in the
Toulousian or
Southern French...
- of Trent. The old
medieval rood
screen between the
choir and nave was
replaced by an
ornate iron
grill choir screen, so that the
parishioners in the...
-
separated from
everyone else. It
remains the only
choir screen in
Venice today. The
front of the
screen has much
Gothic influence,
especially from the late...
- was
connected directly to the nave. The
choir was
simply the east part of the nave, and was
fenced off by a
screen or low railing,
called cancelli, which...
- high
altar and the
choir screen, now
unique in Alsace,
which have also been maintained. In 1780, the now
nationally famous choir organ of
Johann Andreas...
- Counter-Reformation. In 1682, the
choir screen (built in 1252) was
broken out to
expand the
choir towards the nave.
Remains of the
choir screen are displa**** in the...
-
Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. Its
backdrop is a 1763
choir screen from the
Cathedral of
Valladolid and a twenty-foot blue
spruce decorated...
- his
creative work are
marked by the
completion of the
choir screen in
Mainz in 1239, the west
choir in
Naumburg in 1249/50 and the work of the building...
- from the nave, and the view of it is
restricted by an
elaborate stone choir-
screen of 1475, with a round-headed arch in the centre, and a
pulpit at each...