Wayland's Work: Anglo-Saxon
Art, Myth & Material Culture
from the 4th to the 7th Century
Stephen Pollington
Lindsay Kerr Brett Hammond
This book is big in size and scope. Here you will find new analyisis,
images and information about early English art and the culture that
inspired it. Wayland's Work contains 226 black & white drawings
and 62 colour plates. Nearly all of these images were commissioned for
this book - many show previously unpublished artifacts. Nothing on this
scale has been achieved for nearly 100 years. This is the book
about the origins and cultural significance of Anglo-Saxon art.
It has sometimes
been suggested that in all the metalwork and archaeological oddments
we have from the Anglo-Saxon period, there is nothing one could call
‘art’. The contributors to this book believe that not only
was there considerable artistry in the output of early Anglo-Saxon workshops,
but that it was vigorous, complex and technically challenging.
The designs found on Anglo-Saxon artefacts is never mere ornament:
in a society which used visual and verbal signals to demonstrate power,
authority, status and ethnicity, no visual statement was ever empty
of meaning. The aim of this work is to prompt a better understanding
of Anglo-Saxon art and the society which produced it.
All three contributors have collaborated on the book with Stephen Pollington
responsible for the text, Lindsay Kerr for the black and white drawings,
and Brett Hammond for (with the exception of the Staffordshire Hoard)
artefact research and colour photography. Between them they have assembled
in these pages much information and many previously unpublished illustrations
which show a wide variety of artefacts, designs and motifs. It is hoped
that this will help bring about a wider knowledge and appreciation of
Anglo-Saxon art.
226
black & white illustrations - 62 colour plates
£70 hardback ISBN 978
1898281566 544 pages
30cm x 30cm
.