Arts & Entertainment
Medieval Festival demonstrates guild skills & life in Middle Ages
Glencairn Museum's annual festival features self-guided tours of castle, galleries & grounds, music, artisan crafts & more for all ages.
Glencairn Museum’s Medieval Festival on Sunday, October 28, 1-5pm, presents the arts and culture of the Middle Ages uniquely interpreted by skilled professionals renowned for their knowledge and craftsmanship.
At the same time, visitors to the castle-like former home during the festival have a rare opportunity to freely tour its galleries, walk through some family living spaces and ride the elevator to the tower for its inspiring views—all for the festival’s budget-friendly admission price.
“The Medieval Festival delivers something for everyone,” says Amy Glenn, event manager for this year’s festival. “This is a chance for families and individuals of all ages to watch and learn about—and sometimes try their hand at—crafts that were integral to European life in the Middle Ages.”
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New this year! Two fun activities for all ages are made possible with the help of students from Bryn Athyn College’s “The Viking World” history class (included in admission fee).
- Viking Selfie Station. Accessorize from items in the Museum’s prop box and pose for a selfie with students dressed as these Norse explorers, merchants, warriors or pirates from the Middle Ages. “Viking” derives from an Old Norse word that means “to raid.”
- Rune Writing. Learn about rune writing—using a character “alphabet” dating from the time before Northern Europe became Christianized—from your Viking helpers and try your hand at making your own rune.
Admission includes self-guided tours of the castle and tower: $10 adults, $8 seniors 65+ and students with ID. Free for members and children 3 and under. Come in medieval costume to win a prize. 267.502.2990 or www.GlencairnMuseum.org for details. Glencairn Museum: 1001 Cathedral Road, Bryn Athyn 19009.
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Please note: For this event the elevator stops at the 1st and 5th floors and the Tower only. Please use the stairs while exploring Glencairn Museum’s galleries on all other floors. No wheelchairs beyond the 1st floor. No backpack-style baby carriers. Photography for private use is permitted. No flash, tripods, selfie sticks or videography.
This is the only time of the year to experience this selection of artisan-level crafts at Glencairn. The galleries and grounds are also open for self-guided and cell-phone audio tours. The Castle Café in the Upper Hall offers seating, along with beverages and snacks available for purchase from Be Well Bakery & Café.
EXTRA!!
‘A Window to the Soul: Nishan Yardumian’s Biblical Art’
Exhibition features paintings and drawings by
Nishan Yardumian (1947-1986), artist and fine arts instructor in Bryn Athyn,
illustrating stories of visitations or appearances depicted in the Bible.
Exhibition in Upper Hall, included in Festival admission fee,
is on display only through Sunday, November 4.
Inside and out, professionals renowned for their knowledge and craftsmanship will be demonstrating a variety of arts developed in the 5th through 15th centuries and still relevant today: creating stained glass windows, illuminating manuscripts, playing replica period musical instruments, wielding medieval weaponry and print-making on the Museum’s replica Gutenberg-era press.
Visitors can also participate at their own pace in activities that give a taste of what it was like to go on a religious pilgrimage during the Middle Ages. A pilgrimage, a common practice in medieval times, was a journey to visit the shrines of saints or other holy places in Europe and the Holy Land. The Pilgrim’s Self-Guided Quest at Glencairn takes participants to various pilgrimage stops throughout the building, where they learn about medieval art or religious practice from costumed interpreters. After earning stamps on their quest map, pilgrims completing their quest receive a badge.
Glencairn’s ensemble-in-residence, Les Canards Chantants, will sing medieval songs at the Festival. Les Canards Chantants (French for “the singing ducks”) is an American solo-voice ensemble performing renaissance polyphony.
DEMONSTRATIONS & ACTIVITIES
Stained glass
J. Kenneth Leap—nationally recognized scholar, instructor, professional artisan and stained glass artist-in-residence at Glencairn—demonstrates cutting, painting, leading and assembling stained glass windows by hand using the tools and techniques that created the most famous windows of Europe as well as those that grace Bryn Athyn Cathedral and Glencairn’s Great Hall and chapel.
Illuminated manuscripts
Susan Kelly vonMedicus, world-renowned artist and teacher, demonstrates “the visual expression of…spiritual longings, questions and mysteries” using traditional natural materials: inks, egg tempera, gold leaf, sheepskin vellum. Visitors can “illuminate” a “manuscript” of their own during the event using contemporary materials.
Musical Instruments
Come and be entertained by Glencairn’s minstrel for the day, Paul Butler, as he plays a variety of replica medieval instruments—some of which he made—and sings songs of the era. He talks about such tools of the minstrel’s trade as the citole, rebec, medieval viol, lyres and pochette, and explains where and when they were played.
Going on Pilgrimage: The Pilgrim’s Self-Guided Quest
Learn about medieval pilgrimages and go on your own quest. Experience medieval religious art and spiritual practices as you follow a quest map through the building and collect stamps at pilgrimage stops in Glencairn’s Great Hall, Medieval Gallery, Roman Gallery, Medieval Treasury and Chapel. Complete your quest to receive a pilgrim’s badge.
Weaponry
Chris Alt, a graduate of Bryn Athyn College, conducted his senior research project on medieval weaponry and how weapons of the period were influenced by religion and spirituality. At the festival Alt and his fellow enthusiasts explain features of the blades, bows, blunt instruments and demonstrate their use in combat.
Printing press
Researcher, writer and educator Kirsten Gyllenhaal explains how the Gutenberg printing press, developed in the mid-15th century, changed written communications. She demonstrates on the Museum’s own replica Gutenberg-era press the steps of inking, pressing and pulling of printed materials as well as the parts and accessories that make up the printing press.
Vocal music
Les Canards Chantants is an American solo-voice ensemble performing renaissance polyphony. Founded in England while co-directors Robin and Graham Bier pursued their postgraduate graduate degrees in early music, Les Canards Chantants made its debut in 2011 with a sold-out concert at the National Centre for Early Music in York, UK. The ensemble’s American debut at the 2015 Boston Early Music Festival Fringe, performing its now signature staged Italian madrigal program Sex, Drugs and Madrigals, was hailed as “some of the best Gesualdo and d’India you are likely to hear” (Early Music America). Since then, the “Singing Ducks” have established a home concert series in Philadelphia, where they are Ensemble in Residence at Glencairn Museum, and have appeared in concert across the East Coast, including collaborations with period instrument ensembles Piffaro and ACRONYM.
Vikings in the Middle Ages
Two fun activities for all ages are made possible with the help of students from Bryn Athyn College’s “The Viking World” history class.
- Viking Selfie Station. Accessorize from items in the college’s prop box and pose for a selfie with students dressed as these Norse explorers, merchants, warriors or pirates from the Middle Ages. “Viking” derives from an Old Norse word that means “to raid.”
- Rune Writing. Learn about rune writing—using characters dating from the time before Northern Europe became Christianized—from your Viking helpers and try your hand at making your own rune. The runic “alphabet” is called Futhark, a name composed from the first six letters of the alphabet—f, u, th, a, r, and k—just as the Greek alphabet is named from “alpha” and “beta,” or a and b.
