Writer Architect Engineer: Antiquity
Writer Architect Engineer: Antiquity
ANTIQUITY
The building confirms to the 3 zones & heavy cornice. The first domestic
building articulated with classical orders- Doric for the ground floor & two varieties
of Corinthian for the upper storeys. The use of the orders is purely ornamental. The
Pallazzos were usually astylar (no orders) but he made use of the orders in the
facades.
Alberti’s ingenuity in pairing a new façade with an older structure illustrates the
practical side of his nature.
Ex: The façade of Sta. Maria Novella, Florence, 1456 – 70 (Figure).
o The façade provides a new solution to the problem of broad lower storey & a
narrower top storey by joining them with large curved scrolls or volutes.
o On the façade he used his favourite ancient image the pedimented temple front
(pilasters, entablature, trabeation & triangular pediment).
o Alberti’s churches in Mantua are reinterpretations of ecclesiastical architecture in
antique terms.
Ex: The facade, S. Andrea Mantua, Begun, 1472.
Alberti’s own buildings were chiefly churches. Alberti had recourse not to
temples but to triumphal arches for his new churches. On the facade he combined two
of his favorite ancient images-
The pedimented temple front (pilasters, entablature, trabeation & triangular
pediment).
The triadic triumphal arch (arched central section & lower portals on either
side).
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ANDREA PALLADIO
The most celebrated architect of the Renaissance period.
He was born in 1508 in Padua, near Venice & began his career as a stone mason.
His frequent visits to Rome, where he studied & sketched ancient architecture,
Palladio transformed from stone mason to architect & antiquarian.
He worked in the cities of the Veneto & in Venice. The greatest influence of the
Pantheon revivals of antiquity in countless creations by Palladio & his followers.
Palladio was a most famous architect of Renaissance period. He became so famous
that, a new style was named after him called Palladianism or Palladian style.
He designed basically 3 different types of buildings.
- Villas – rich people houses in the country side.
- Pallazzos – rich people houses in the cities.
- Church buildings
Classicist: Palladio employed the classical motifs such as Monumental orders &
columned pediment porticoes & structures with more freedom with great strictness
with regard to proportion. That is the reason he is called as classicist.
Based principally on proportions, monumental orders, symmetry & the image of
temple front, Palladio’s classicism was embodied most vividly in the villas he built in
the countryside around Vicenza & later on to the church buildings.
Relief treatment of façade that suggests depth: The architecture of Palladio is always
3-dimensional rather than 2-dimensional like Alberti. The free standing colonnades,
pediment porticoes of the facade suggest depth.
Horizontal lines accentuated: During Renaissance period, man was the measure, so
that all dimensions were related to the human scale. Horizontal lines in a facade of a
building depict the use of human scale.
Mannerism: Palladio was a great mannerist. That means he never blindly copied the
ideas from the classical architecture. Success of the Palladio was obtained primarily
by the ideas from the past & integrates them very successfully to the situation at that
point of time.
Free standing colonnades, straight or curved used to unite the central with the flanking
elements of a building. The pediment, the colonnade below becomes the central
element in all of his works.
Ex: Villa Rotunda & The white house.
Palladian Motif: He was commissioned to reconstruct a loggia around an old structure
Ex: The Pallazo della Ragione (Basilica), Vicenza, 1546
Palladio designed facade treatment of each bay. A central circular arch is supported by
short orders. The tall orders are adjacent to the short orders. Circular openings are
seen the spandrel of the arches. This is called as “Palladian Motif”.
Adopted the monumental orders, columned porticoes to domestic buildings.
Palladio’s Villas are stripped, spare, pure, delicate & serious minded. The most
famous of Palladio’s villas & certainly the most “perfect” in its symmetry.
Ex: Villa Rotunda, Vicenza, Veneto, 1550.
The dominant elements of Palladio’s massing is a grand, cubic central block, into it is
set a cylindrical core, appearing on the exterior as a Pantheon-like steeped
hemispherical dome & from each side, an identical Roman temple front motif
(hexastyle ionic porch) set above a noble flight of steps opens out to the landscape.
Conjured up the modern church out of the Roman temple.
The temple front image with its evocations of the antique served Palladio well & he
cleverly articulated a façade in the language of Classicism. Later he expanded it from
country houses to colossal proportions to face Monumental Churches.
Ex: San Giorgio Maggiore, Venice.
A huge pedimented, tetra style temple front placed before the tall nave, its dimensions
matched to those of the nave: then set before the lower & narrower side aisles, a
section of pediment on doubled terminal pilasters, stretched on either side to the width
of the church, its cornices abutting the columnar order in the forward plane.
Use of statues on the skyline serves to break the definition of the roof line.
Ex; Palazzo Chiericati, Vicenza, 1550
All his Villas are symmetrically planned with rigorous geometry. A recurring feature
is the arcade of columns set right forward from the main wall of the house, whether as
a portico or loggia, which serves to relate the building to its immediate surroundings.
Palladio had a tremendous influence in UK & Britain as well as the USA. His
architecture is so famous that, it was called Palladian Architecture.
Books written by Palladio: Palladio wrote & illustrated his own architectural treatise,
Quattro Libri dell’ architectura, 1570 – in the treatise he set down the plans &
elevations of his own buildings, along with theories of architecture derived from his
study of antiquity.
He studies the antiquities of Rome & wrote the following books-
- ‘The antiquities of Rome’ &
- ‘Four books of architecture’
In 1554 he published a guide book, Le antichita di Roma & Descrizione delle.. Chiese
di Roma & in 1556 an important edition of Vitruvius illustrated by Palladio.
The competition for the façade had been announced by pope Clement XII. He drew
from the finest achievements of the 16th & 17th centuries, synthesizing Maderno’s St.
Peter’s façade, Michelangelo’s palaces on the Campidoglio & Palladio’s churches into
a severe, highly disciplined façade of colossal scale that was meant to symbolize the
international authority & power of the church.
Palladio’s clear harmonious proportions masterly deployed of select, almost
standardized antique forms & commitment to systematic formulations of rules made
his buildings a model for classicizing architects all over Europe.
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19TH CENTURY THEORY
• Imperfection & marks left by the individual workman are desirable over perfection of
joinery & finish.
• Ideal building as one with exposed monolithic construction with a uniform level of
craftsmanship.
• He founded the Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings in 1877 and the
Kelmscott press in 1890.
• A notable advance on his theory was made by the Bauhaus, the famed school of
architecture and applied art in Germany, where Walter Gropius and his colleagues
applied Morris's principles to the machine and scientific technology.
• William Morris’s ideas influenced the furniture design of F. L. Wright.
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GOTTFRIED SEMPER (1803-1879):
A leading German architect and writer on art who was among the principal
practitioners of the Neo-Renaissance style in Germany and Austria.
Began work in Dresden in Germany, later worked in Zurich, Switzerland, Vienna &
Austria.
The Four Elements of Architecture is a book by Semper Published in 1851.
The four elementary motives underlying architectural creation:
o the hearth, which represents the central social element,
o the platform (wall), which serves to elevate the hearth,
o the roof & its structure, which protects the hearth from the rain, and
o the enclosure (non-structural of textiles etc.), which keeps out the rain and cold.
Origin of architectural ornament is in the technical arts of textiles, ceramics & metal
work.
Semper believed that long before Man made a building he evolved patterns (in
weaving, ceramics & metal works). So, ornament was actually more basic and
symbolic than structure.
Architecture was always structure plus cladding- construction by its very layered &
not monolithic.
Semper was a leading exponent of Renaissance revival.
The use of double columns of the east front of the Louvre, a Roman triumphal
arch, and various Renaissance Revival motifs are quoted in his buildings to harmonize
with context.
Greek architecture – decorative parts closely connected to the construction.
In his influential writings, principally “Style in the Technical and Tectonic Arts”
(1860–63) he discusses extensively the use of materials within arts, crafts &
architecture.
Leading architectural theorist of the 19th century on polychromy & polychromy in
antiquity.
Believed paint was used on classical buildings as a protective material (Greek,
Etruscan, Egyptian). Colour had symbolic associations. Colour is an expression of
artistic freedom.
In his famous work of the Semperopera in Dresden, Germany, his style of Eclecticism
can be seen in his use of Renaissance, Baroque, and Greek features.
In regard to Semper’s view on built and restored architecture, he was not against the
restoring of buildings as he approved of his son updating the Semperopera after it
burned in 1869.
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ANTOINE CHRYSOSTOME QUATREMERE DE QUINCY (1755 –1849):
“The idea of theory differs from practice in as much as it refers to the mental or
intellectual activity that reasons or combines rather than the bodily or manual activity
that fashions or executes”.
Theory – mental or intellectual activity
Practice – bodily or manual activity
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