What a monument of a book!
So well-made and well-printed it shows her vast oeuvre, after a list of Geddes’ works published or in public locations with excellent photos in situ, the glass windows and drawings and paintings. In the Introduction a quote says: “No other art can be so vital, so much a part of solar life; in comparison, the blind masses of sculpture and the opaque planes of painting are void and insentient.” Her interest in the ‘deep, mysterious and subdued’ colour of the French windows of the 12th and 13th centuries has never been surpassed, that ‘the true perfection of a painted window is to be serene, intense, brilliant, like flaming jewellery full of easily legible and quaint subjects, and exquisitely subtle, yet simple in its harmonies’.
In clear time-based chapters her upbringing and life enrols with photos from her education period, studies and the development of her own style. Compliments for the clear text which reads so pleasantly; the reader can understand Geddes’ designs, the subject and glass choices and her strong graphical and painterly mixture on the glass panels. Also the commission on embroidered and appliqued needlework of ? among others ? banners for the Catholic Church, Duniry, Dalystown, and County Galway from 1919 is well-documented, as monumental artists in those days were interested in all disciplines.
A book to read in one shot for all interested in or studying stained glass should read closely, as Geddes is a serious inspiration for future generations.
Angela van der Burght