Archives for posts with tag: Church

Ashampstead Nativity Greetings Card available at St Clement’s Church. Photo: Quintin Lake

St Clement’s Church, Ashampstead, Berkshire contains fine medieval wall paintings dating from c1250. These four Holy Infancy scenes with their decorative heading are in the nave. They illustrate The Annunciation, The Visitation, The Nativity and the Appearance of the Angels to the Shepherds. The paintings were defaced and covered over at the time of the Reformation. they were rediscovered in 1886 and are now being conserved.

The wall-paintings were specially photographed to reveal the maximum amount of detail in the originals. More images from the photoshoot

Also available at St Clement’s Church are a set of 6 different postcards of the Nativity and a folded card. Proceeds from the sale of the cards go to the maintenance of the church. Map showing location of the Church

Altar and vaults, interior of St Barbara Church, Kutna Hora, Czech Republic. Photo: Quintin Lake

Vaults above the nave of St Barbara Church, Kutna Hora, Czech Republic. Photo: Quintin Lake

Vaults behind the altar, St Barbara Church, Kutna Hora, Czech Republic. Photo: Quintin Lake

Frescoes and vaults of St Barbara Cathedral, Kutna Hora, Czech Republic. Photo: Quintin Lake

St Barbara is one of the most famous Gothic churches in central Europe and it is a UNESCO world heritage site. St Barbara is the patron saint of miners (among others), which was highly appropriate for a town whose wealth was based entirely upon its silver mines. Construction began in 1388, but because work on the church was interrupted several times, it was not completed until 1905.

VIEW MORE / BUY PRINTS / LICENSE IMAGES of St Barbara Church, Kutna Hora here >>

Photography  © Quintin Lake, 2011

Interior of St Clement's Church, Ashampstead showing wall-paintings. The paintings are thought to date from C.1230-40. Photo: Quintin Lake

Annunciation. Detail from the Holy Infancy fresco on the North wall. St Clement's Church, Ashampstead. Photo: Quintin Lake

The Visitation. Detail from the Holy Infancy fresco on the North wall. St Clement's Church, Ashampstead. Photo: Quintin Lake

The Nativity. Detail from the Holy Infancy fresco on the North wall. St Clement's Church, Ashampstead. Photo: Quintin Lake

The Appearance of the Angel to the Shepherds. Detail from the Holy Infancy fresco on the North wall. St Clement's Church, Ashampstead. Photo: Quintin Lake

These photographs were made during an assignment to produce compositions suitable for use as greetings cards which will be sold to fund building work on the church. The wall-paintings were lit with two strobes bounced off reflecting umbrellas to give an even an even neutral light on the subject. Various enhancements were made in post production to reveal the maximum amount of detail including increasing contrast and saturation of the originals.

The Courtauld institute has written “These 13th Century paintings are undoubtedly amongst the most important of their date in England, not only because of the amount of painting that survives but because of their high quality”. The paintings were discovered in 1895 having been plastered over during the reformation. Restoration work was undertaken in 1960.

VIEW MORE / BUY PRINTS / LICENSE IMAGES of the Frescoes at St Clement’s Church here >>

Exterior of Tewkesbury Abbey tower dating from 1150 rated "probably the largest and finest Romanesque tower in England" by Sir Nikolaus Pevsner. Photo: Quintin Lake

The Abbey of the Blessed Virgin Mary at Tewkesbury in the English county of Gloucestershire is the second largest parish church in the country and a former Benedictine monastery. In 1471 during  Battle of Tewkesbury, one of the decisive battles of the Wars of the Roses, bloodshed within church so great that it is closed. The tower is a particularly fine example of Romanesque architecture characterised by semi-circular arches.

VIEW MORE / BUY images of Tewkesbury Abbey here >>

Tower of University Church of St Mary the Virgin, Oxford seen from Radcliffe Square at dusk. Built in the 13th century. The architect is unknown, though the master mason in 1275 was Richard of Abingdon. Photo: Quintin Lake

Architectural photography of  the Tower of University Church of St Mary the Virgin, Oxford seen from Radcliffe Square at dusk. Built in the 13th century. The architect is unknown, though the master mason in 1275 was Richard of Abingdon.

View more / Buy Prints / License Stock images from this photoshoot here

More Stock Photography of Oxford

Photography © Quintin Lake, 2010

Blitz damaged nave and steeple of Christ Church Greyfriars, by Christopher Wren in the City of London. The tower, rising from the west end of the church, had a simple round-arched main entranceway and, above, windows decorated with neoclassical pediments. Large carved pineapples, symbols of welcome, graced the four roof corners of the main church structure. Unique among the Wren churches, the east and west walls had buttresses. (Photo: Quintin Lake)

Remains of the Second World War damaged nave of Christ Church Greyfriars, London by Christopher Wren, 1687. Former General Post office buildings at right, now Merrill Lynch regional headquarters, contemporary Merrill Lynch offices at rear. (Photo: Quintin Lake)

Christ Church Greyfriars, also known as Christ Church Newgate, was an Anglican church located at the junction of Newgate Street and Montague Street, opposite St Paul’s Cathedral in the City of London. Built first in the gothic style, then in the English Baroque style by Sir Christopher Wren in 1687, it ranked among the City’s most notable pieces of architecture and places of worship.

The church was destroyed in the Second World War during the Blitz on December 29, 1940. A firebomb struck the roof and tore into the nave. Much of the surrounding neighbourhood was also set alight—a total of eight Wren churches burned that night. At Christ Church, the only fitting known to have been saved was the cover of the finely carved wooden font, recovered by an unknown postman who ran inside as the flames raged. The roof and vaulting collapsed into the nave; the tower and four main walls, made of stone, remained standing but were smoke-scarred and gravely weakened. A photograph taken in the light of the following day shows two firemen hosing down smouldering rubble in the nave. The ruins are now a public garden.

In 2002, the financial firm Merrill Lynch completed a regional headquarters complex on land abutting to the north and the west. In conjunction with that project, the Christ Church site got a major renovation and archeological examination. Construction workers put King Edward Street back to its former course so that the site regained its pre-war footprint. The churchyard was spruced up, its metal railings restored. In 2006, work was completed to convert the tower and spire into a modern twelve-level private residence. The nave area continues as a memorial; the wooden font cover, topped by a carved angel, can today be seen in the porch of St Sepulchre-without-Newgate.

These photographs were made during a commission by Thames & Hudson / View Pictures for a book on the architecture of the City of London.

View more images of Christ Church Greyfriars Here

Photography © Quintin Lake, 2010

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