2007 © Maxim Tabachnik
Grotesque and Lion Corbels
In the Great Hall of Beaune’s Hôtel-Dieu (15th c.), painted wooden supports project from the beams to bear the roof’s weight. Known as corbels, these are carved as a lion’s head and a grotesque human face with open mouth. Beyond their structural role, such figures conveyed moral lessons and protective symbolism, enlivening the hospital’s solemn interior.
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