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| Essential
Architecture- Search by style
North Italian Renaissance Architecture |
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Special thanks to Michael Greenhalgh
http://rubens.anu.edu.au/ |
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| Alberti Leon Battista 1404-1472 Palazzo
Rucellai facade |
Alberti Leon Battista 1404-1472 S Andrea
facade |
Alberti Leon Battista 1404-1472 S Andrea view |
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| Alberti Leon Battista 1404-1472 S Sebastiano
facade |
Alberti Leon Battista 1404-1472 S Sebastiano
interior |
Alberti Leon Battista 1404-1472 SM Novella a
capital |
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| Alberti Leon Battista 1404-1472 SM Novella
facade |
Alberti Leon Battista 1404-1472 SM Novella
facade: detail |
Bramante Donato 1444-1514 S Pietro in
Montorio tempietto |
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| Bramante Donato 1444-1514 S Pietro in
Montorio tempietto: drum and dome |
Bramante Donato 1444-1514 SM della Pace
courtyard |
Bramante Donato 1444-1514 SM delle Grazie
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| Bramante Donato 1444-1514 SM delle Grazie
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Bramante Donato 1444-1514 SM delle Grazie
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Bramante Donato 1444-1514 SM delle Grazie
lantern |
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| Bramante Donato 1444-1514 SM delle Grazie
lantern: detail |
Bramante Donato 1444-1514 SM presso S Satiro
false apse |
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Italian Renaissance architects based their
theories and practices on Classical Roman examples. The Renaissance revival
of Classical Rome was as important in architecture as it was in literature.
A pilgrimage to Rome to study the ancient buildings and ruins, especially
the Colosseum and Pantheon, was considered essential to an architect's
training. Classical orders and architectural elements such as columns,
pilasters, pediments, entablatures, arches, and domes form the vocabulary of
Renaissance buildings. Vitruvius's writings on architecture also influenced
the Renaissance definition of beauty in architecture. As in the Classical
world, Renaissance architecture is characterized by harmonious form,
mathematical proportion, and a unit of measurement based on the human scale.
During the Renaissance, architects trained as humanists helped raise the
status of their profession from skilled laborer to artist. They hoped to
create structures that would appeal to both emotion and reason. Three key
figures in Renaissance architecture were Filippo Brunelleschi, Leon Battista
Alberti, and Andrea Palladio.
Brunelleschi
Filippo Brunelleschi (1377–1446) is widely considered the first Renaissance
architect. Trained as a goldsmith in his native city of Florence,
Brunelleschi soon turned his interests to architecture, traveling to Rome to
study ancient buildings. Among his greatest accomplishments is the
engineering of the dome of Florence Cathedral (Santa Maria del Fiore, also
known as the Duomo). He was also the first since antiquity to use the
classical orders Doric, Ionic, and Corinthian in a consistent and
appropriate manner.
Although Brunelleschi's structures may appear simple, they rest on an
underlying system of proportion. Brunelleschi often began with a unit of
measurement whose repetition throughout the building created a sense of
harmony, as in the Ospedale degli Innocenti (Florence, 1419). This building
is based on a modular cube, which determines the height of and distance
between the columns, and the depth of each bay.
Alberti
Leon Battista Alberti (1406–1472) worked as an architect from the 1450s
onward, principally in Florence, Rimini, and Mantua. As a trained humanist
and true Renaissance man, Alberti was as accomplished as an architect as he
was a humanist, musician, and art theorist. Alberti's many treatises on art
include Della Pittura (On Painting), De Sculptura (On Sculpture), and De re
Aedificatoria (On Architecture). The first treatise, Della Pittura, was a
fundamental handbook for artists, explaining the principles behind linear
perspective, which may have been first developed by Brunelleschi. Alberti
shared Brunelleschi's reverence for Roman architecture and was inspired by
the example of Vitruvius, the only Roman architectural theorist whose
writings are extant.
Alberti aspired to recreate the glory of ancient times through architecture.
His facades of the Tempio Malatestiano (Rimini, 1450) and the Church of
Santa Maria Novella (Florence, 1470) are based on Roman temple fronts. His
deep understanding of the principles of classical architecture are also seen
in the Church of Sant'Andrea (Mantua, 1470). The columns here are not used
decoratively, but retain their classical function as load-bearing supports.
For Alberti, architecture was not merely a means of constructing buildings;
it was a way to create meaning.
Palladio
Andrea Palladio (1508–1580) was the chief architect of the Venetian
Republic, writing an influential treatise, I quattro libri dell'architettura
(Four Books on Architecture,1570; 41.100.126.19). Due to the new demand for
villas in the sixteenth century, Palladio specialized in domestic
architecture, although he also designed two beautiful and impressive
churches in Venice, San Giorgio Maggiore (1565) and Il Redentore (1576).
Palladio's villas are often centrally planned, drawing on Roman models of
country villas. The Villa Emo (Treviso, 1559) was a working estate, while
the Villa Rotonda (Vicenza, 1566–70) was an aristocratic refuge. Both plans
rely on classical ideals of symmetry, axiality, and clarity. The simplicity
of Palladian designs allowed them to be easily reproduced in rural England
and, later, on southern plantations in the American colonies. |
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