Despite claims to the contrary, there really are not cathedrals everywhere, even for those with the eyes to see them. The Gothic cathedrals we generally associate with the term (Notre Dame in Paris, the Duomo in Milan, the Dom in Cologne, Salisbury Cathedral) were designed in a relatively short period, from the 12th to 14th centuries, and in a select number of cities, concentrated within about 700 miles of Paris. These building projects spanned centuries and generations; they were enormous, rare investments of labor and capital. Even if we include all Gothic churches (“cathedrals” refer to a subset — only the seat of a diocese is a cathedral) the extant large-scale churches from the medieval period number in the mere hundreds. The how of these Gothic masterpieces has been shrouded in mystery. Gothic by Design: the Dawn of Architectural Draftsmanship is a new exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art that demystifies the very human process behind these buildings, revealing mind-bending ingenuity in a radically analog past.
Like many styles, the “Gothic” is a bit of retroactive branding in service of a later polemic. The style was baptized indirectly by a primary foil, Giorgio Vasari (1511–74), who needed the Gothic or Germanic style as a kind of nadir from which the formal purity of his cherished, Renaissance neo-classicism could emerge. He characterized the styleas “monstrous and barbarous,” forsaking order for “confusion and disorder.” The Gothic style had “polluted the world.” (In point of fact, Vasari was rather loose with just what counted as the Gothic, seeming to start the clock in the 500s, only to describe the kind of dense naturalistic flourishes that peaked some 800 years later.) Vasari is also, incidentally, an originating theorist of “design” (“designo”) as such. He is often credited with having established the primacy of “design” as the mental activity that fathers all of the arts. For Vasari, the dense, wild-seeming ornamentation of the Gothic was at odds with the formal rigor of proper design; as such, “Gothic by design” would almost be a contradiction in terms.