14 Renaissance To Neo Classical PDF
14 Renaissance To Neo Classical PDF
14 Renaissance To Neo Classical PDF
RENAISSANCE ARCHITECTURE
CHARACTERISTICS
RENAISSANCE ARCHITECTURE
Villa Capra "La Rotonda", Italy (Andrea Palladio)
• Villa Rotonda inspired a thousand
subsequent buildings, but the villa was
itself inspired by the Pantheon in Rome.
RENAISSANCE ARCHITECTURE
Palazzo del Tè (1524-1534), mantua, Italy
RENAISSANCE ARCHITECTURE
Saint Peter's Square, Vatican City
• Vatican City, the world center of the Roman Catholic church, is an independent
state that lies entirely within Rome, Italy. Many of the city’s buildings were
designed and decorated by some of history’s greatest artists. Italian architect
Gianlorenzo Bernini created the vast plaza in front of Saint Peter's Basilica in the
1600s.
RENAISSANCE ARCHITECTURE
Saint Peter’s Basilica,
Rome (1506 – 1614 A.D)
• In 1506, architect Donato Bramante, under commission from Pope Julius II was
selected through a competition to design this monument in Vatican City
• Consequent to the death of Bramante, Sangallo, Raphael and Peruzzi before
completion of the church, Florentine artist Michelangelo assumed the supervisory
role in 1546, for ‘love of God’.
• His design simplified and unified the architectural elements of Bramante’s plan for
the basilica with Maderno’s extended nave plus narthex. Resultantly, its a
structure of monumental proportions, influencing dome design and construction
for the next 300 years
RENAISSANCE ARCHITECTURE
Saint Peter’s Basilica, Rome
Bramante
Raphael
Maderno
Sangallo Maderno
RENAISSANCE ARCHITECTURE
Saint Peter’s Basilica, Rome
• Enormous Greek Cross (named so, as St. Andrew, B/o. St. Peter was
crucified in Greece on such a symmetrical cross); 4 bay’ nave, crossing apse
• Ribbed dome supported on 4 large piers capped with a lantern / dome drum
with windows; 4 lower domes surrounding the central dome
• Tallest dome (from basilica floor to tip of the cross above the dome) @ 448.1 ft
136.1 ft dia, little smaller than that of Pantheon (142 ft) and of Florence
cathedral (144 ft, designed by Brunelleschi); but greater than the dome of the
byzantine cathedral, the Hagia Sophia at Constantinople
RENAISSANCE ARCHITECTURE
The Panorama
RENAISSANCE ARCHITECTURE
RENAISSANCE ARCHITECTURE
Statues of St. Helena, St. Longinus, St. Andrew and St. Veronica
on the 4 niches of the 4 large piers below the Dome
RENAISSANCE ARCHITECTURE
• Michelangelo's late Roman buildings,
particularly St. Peter's Basilica, may be
considered precursors to Baroque
architecture.
BAROQUE ARCHITECTURE
Hall of Mirrors (1678 – 1684), Palace of Versailles, France
King Louis XIV of France charged French architects Louis Le Vau, André Le Nôtre, and
Charles Lebrun with the expansion of the Palace of Versailles. Construction went on
for a century starting in the 1660s.
The principal feature of this famous hall is the seventeen mirror-clad arches that
reflect the seventeen arcaded windows that overlook the gardens.
Glass – Venetian monopoly, foiled by making Glass in Versailles for this work
BAROQUE ARCHITECTURE
Hall of Mirrors (1678 – 1684), Palace of Versailles, France
BAROQUE ARCHITECTURE
The Benedictine Abbey, Austria
BAROQUE ARCHITECTURE
Saint Paul's Cathedral (1675-1708/1711), London
BAROQUE ARCHITECTURE
BAROQUE ARCHITECTURE
BAROQUE ARCHITECTURE
BAROQUE ARCHITECTURE
Saint Paul's Cathedral, London
BAROQUE ARCHITECTURE
Saint Paul's Cathedral (1675-1708/1711)
BAROQUE ARCHITECTURE
• Rococo architecture was a lighter, more
graceful, yet also more elaborate version
of Baroque architecture, which was ornate.
NEOCLASSICAL ARCHITECTURE
University of Virginia
• Thomas Jefferson, president of the United States from 1801 to 1809, founded the
University of Virginia at Charlottesville in 1819. An architect as well as a statesman,
Jefferson designed the famous neoclassical buildings of the school’s Lawn complex,
inspired from Andrea Palladio. His style strongly influenced the architecture of
other public buildings in the United States.
NEOCLASSICAL ARCHITECTURE
Monticello
• Monticello was the home of Thomas Jefferson, third president of the United
States, and it reflected his unique architectural ideas and tastes.
• Construction on this Virginia estate, now a World Heritage Site, began in the late
1700s and lasted until 1809. He designed the 35-room house which was
completed in 1809.
• Jefferson died at Monticello in 1826 and was buried on the grounds.
NEOCLASSICAL ARCHITECTURE
METABOLISM ARCHITECTURE