Tracery - meaning and definition. What is Tracery
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What (who) is Tracery - definition

TYPE OF WINDOW DESIGN
Traceries; Bar tracery; Plate tracery; Tracery window; Gothic tracery; User:M-meyer.4/sandbox; Gothic Tracery
  • Unusual fretwork tracery, [[Barsham, Suffolk]] parish church, east end
  • Bar tracery with cusped circles, Reims Cathedral, apse chapel
  • Decorated bar tracery, [[All Saints Church, Lindfield]], east window
  • Rayonnant bar tracery, Notre-Dame de Paris, north rose window
  • Perpendicular bar tracery, [[King's College Chapel, Cambridge]], great east window
  • Perpendicular Gothic: [[King's College Chapel, Cambridge]] (1446–1544)
  • Plate tracery, [[Laon Cathedral]], north rose window
  • Plate tracery, Lincoln Cathedral "Dean's Eye" rose window (c. 1225)
  • alt=
  • Strasbourg Cathedral, west front rose window, schematic

tracery         
¦ noun (plural traceries)
1. Architecture ornamental stone openwork, typically in the upper part of a Gothic window.
2. a delicate branching pattern.
Derivatives
traceried adjective
Tracery         
·noun Ornamental work with rambled lines.
II. Tracery ·noun The decorative head of a Gothic window.
III. Tracery ·noun A similar decoration in some styles of vaulting, the ribs of the vault giving off the minor bars of which the tracery is composed.
IV. Tracery ·add. ·noun A tracing of lines; a system of lines produced by, or as if by, tracing, ·esp. when interweaving or branching out in ornamental or graceful figures.
Tracery         
Tracery is an architectural device by which windows (or screens, panels, and vaults) are divided into sections of various proportions by stone bars or ribs of moulding. Most commonly, it refers to the stonework elements that support the glass in a window.

Wikipedia

Tracery

Tracery is an architectural device by which windows (or screens, panels, and vaults) are divided into sections of various proportions by stone bars or ribs of moulding. Most commonly, it refers to the stonework elements that support the glass in a window. The term probably derives from the tracing floors on which the complex patterns of windows were laid out in late Gothic architecture. Tracery can also be found on the interior of buildings and the exterior.

There are two main types: plate tracery and the later bar tracery. The evolving style from Romanesque to Gothic architecture and changing features, such as the thinning of lateral walls and enlarging of windows, led to the innovation of tracery. The earliest form of tracery, called plate tracery, began as openings that were pierced from a stone slab. Bar tracery was then implemented, having derived from the plate tracery. However, instead of a slab, the windows were defined by moulded stone mullions, which were lighter and allowed for more openings and intricate designs.

Pointed arch windows of Gothic buildings were initially (late 12th–late 13th centuries) lancet windows, a solution typical of the Early Gothic or First Pointed style and of the Early English Gothic. Plate tracery was the first type of tracery to be developed, emerging in the style called High Gothic. High Gothic is distinguished by the appearance of bar tracery, allowing the construction of much larger window openings, and the development of Curvilinear, Flowing, and Reticulated tracery, ultimately contributing to the Flamboyant style. Late Gothic in most of Europe saw tracery patterns resembling lace develop, while in England Perpendicular Gothic or Third Pointed preferred plainer vertical mullions and transoms. Tracery is practical as well as decorative, because the increasingly large windows of Gothic buildings needed maximum support against the wind.

Examples of use of Tracery
1. The architects originally likened the tracery of steel girders to the finely cracked glazing of Chinese pottery.
2. A number of years ago the place was restored and painted white on the inside with red and blue tracery around the arches and domes.
3. But now you cant visit a village fte, down a swift one in a country pub or pop by a bourgeois barbecue without seeing a hint, and sometimes more than that, of delicate tracery peeping through summer clothing.
4. I bet you can‘t name a single Venetian architect, and yet the buildings of Venice – the glinting mosaics inside St Mark‘s Basilica, the enclosed arc of the Rialto bridge, the tracery facade of the Ca‘d‘Oro – are unforgettable.