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Showing posts with label Tiling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tiling. Show all posts

Saturday, August 13, 2011

Visit the Church of Mercy - St. Mary Major (Chaves)

The Church of Mercy, located in the Parish of St. Mary Major (Chaves) was installed in 1580. However, his church was only built in the second half of the seventeenth century and is marked by an exuberant Baroque aesthetic and harmonious.
Access to the church of Mercy is performed by a wide staircase. Proportionality and harmony underscore the facade of this temple in the second half of the seventeenth century, adopting a refined baroque grammar.
The wedges are marked in front by pilasters and granite capitelizadas. The ground floor is open for three arched openings of the grid, which provide a starting gate. Addorsed its pillars are four spiral columns of Corinthian capitals and based on pedestals decorated scheme that is repeated on the upper floor and on an entablature noted, three bay windows flanking and right spar with balustrade. The strong cornice is marked by massive pinnacles and bulging in the middle of which stands a crown flanked by fins and scrolls surrounding a central niche with a bas-relief commemorating the glorification of Mercy, curved pediment surmounted by stopped and topped by a Latin cross.
Above the lobby is located in the choir. The church body is a single nave, with its valued walls with tile flooring of the eighteenth century, drawing outlined architectures that fall episodes of the Old and New Testament. The roof of the church is painted with a Visitation, composition performed in 1743 by the painter Jerome Braga da Rocha.
The chancel presents a grand and gilded altarpiece, baroque composition of the eighteenth century, while the vestry has some quality paintings, including a table of the seventeenth century and allusive to Purgatory.

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Visit the Church of Santa Maria da Graça (Setúbal)

The Church of Our Lady of Grace Cathedral and Setúbal, located in the Parish of Our Lady of Grace in the heart of the original medieval village Setubal, having been around this that has developed the most important medieval district of the city, as well as the religious center and administrative policy.
Founded in the thirteenth century, the current building is a reconstruction of the High Renaissance Mannerist with an imposing facade. Within columns with fresh, carving and tiles from the XVII and XVIII.

Friday, June 24, 2011

Visit the Church of St. John the Baptist (Tomar)

The Church of St. John the Baptist is the late fifteenth century and has a Manueline portal surmounted by an octagonal spire.
Inside is a pulpit carved in stone, with tiles called "Diamond Tip" and sixteenth-century paintings including a Last Supper of Gregory Lopes.
The church was classified as a National Monument in 1910.

Sunday, May 29, 2011

Visit the Church of Grijó

The Church of Grijó has tiled walls of the seventeenth century altarpiece carved chairs, black wood and good paintings.