Architecture Appreciation Test 3: Briar Jones MSU
Robert Venturi and Denise Scott Brown
"Less is a Bore"
Etienne-Louis Boullee
1728-99 Monument to Newton
Monticello
1770; Thomas Jefferson
University of Virginia
1817-1826; Thomas Jefferson
Brooklyn Bridge
1869-1883; Suspension bridge; tension
Guild House
1960-1965; Philadelphia, PA; Robert Venturi
Vanna Venturi House
1964; Chestnut Hill, PA; Robert Venturi
Phillips Exeter Academy Library
1965-72; Louis Kahn
Gothic
A-historical, asymmetrical; architecture is a service to God
Frank Lloyd Wright
American (Chicago) architect (1869-1959); acknowledges as the most significant American architect of the 20th century;
AEG Turbine Factory
Berlin; Peter Behrens; 1909
Trinity Church (1872-1877)
Boston; H.H. Richardson
Palazzo Caprini
Bramante; Rome, ca. 1512 (demolished)
Pazzi Chapel
Brunelleschi
Church of San Lorenzo, Florence
Brunelleschi; Medici hired him;
Beaux ARTS Neoclassical Eclecticism
Charles Garnier Paris Opera House
Columbia Exposition of 1893
Chicago
The "Duomo"
Dome of the Cathedral of Florence 1418-1436; largest dome built since the Romans; technical achievement in its construction; no centering-- built to be self-supporting as it was constructed; employed ribs and double shells
The "Tempietto" of San Pietro
Donato Bramante; Tempietto, Rome; Begun 1502; circle and square represent the perfection of the divinity; believe religious figure "Saint Peter" was killed here; meant to be an object, a picture, a marker
St. Louis Gateway Arch
Eero Saarinen
Dulles Airport
Eero Saarinen; D.C.
TWA Terminal
Eero Saarinen; NYC
Church of S. Spirito
Filippo Brunelleschi; proportions and style fully realized volumes - CUBES; constructed perspective
Chicago
Forefront of American architecture; 1871 fire; Chicago School of architects
Falling Water House
Frank Lloyd Wright
Guggenheim Museum
Frank Lloyd Wright
Robie House
Frank Lloyd Wright; 1908-09
Unity Temple
Frank Lloyd Wright; 1909
Richardsonian Romanesque
Henry Hobson Richardson
Mannerism (high Renaissance)
Inventive combinations of elements of purposefully play with classical rules; proportions-exaggerated;
Viollet-le-Duc (1814-1879)
Leading proponent of the Gothic Revival in France
Church of Sant' Andrea
Leon Battista Alberti
Chicago Opera House
Louis Sullivan -- Adler & Sullivan
Seagram Building
Ludwig Mies van der Rohe; God is in the details
Renaissance (as opposed to Gothic)
Mathematics, Rational, Proportions, universal order; not aspire to heavens, grounded to earth, human reason
Botticelli
Medici's were his patrons
Saint Peter's 1505-1612
Michelangelo changed it; a magnificent new church over the crypt of St. Peter; Dome becomes an icon of "dome" often repeated; the dome of all domes; tomb for Pope Julius II would not fit in old basilica (almost 1110 years old in 1505); Bramante's scheme was on a scale grander than any Roman structure; building the size of the Baths of Diocletian; dome comparable to the Pantheon
The "Campidoglio", Capitoline Hill (1536)
Michelangelo; organization deviates from purity of Renaissance geometry; subtle tension of angled plan and oval plaza; ideas beginning to become Mannerism
Barcelona Pavilion
Mies van der Rohe
The Four Books of Architecture
Palladio wrote treatise on architecture; constructed villa between Venice and Vincenza 1550
Bibliotheque Ste. Genevieve
Paris; Henri Labrouste 1842-1850; symbolic train station; represent readers journey into knowledge; cast iron shaped into columns and arches support vaults and domes
Gustav Eiffel
Paris; 1885; iron construction
Pompidou Center
Renzo Piano and Richard Rogers
Burnham and Root
Rookery, Chicago
Biltmore
Vanderbilt Mansion, Ashville, NC; F.L. Olmstead
Fagus Factory
Walter Gropius; Germany 1911; International Style
Chrysler Building
William Van Alen
Donato Bramante (1444-1514)
a close associate of Leonardo DaVinci; Early work in Milan; Moved to Rome after French sack of Milan in 1499
Early Renaissance
a style of Italian Renaissance art and architecture developed during the 15th century, characterized by the development of linear perspective, chiaroscuro, and in buildings, by the free and inventive use of classical details
High Renaissance
a style of Italian renaissance art and architecture developed in the late 15th- and early 16th centuries characterized by an emphasis on draftsmanship, the illusion of sculptural volume in painting, and in building , by the imitative use of whole orders and compositional arrangements in the classical style, with great attention to the formulation of compositional rules after the precepts of Vitruvius and the precedents of existing ruins.
Mannerism
a transitional style in European architecture in the late 16th century, particularly in Italy, characterized by the unconventional use of the classical elements.
post modernism
against "universalizing" processes-- monarchy, aesthetics, modernism; for "contextual" processes-- capitalism, computer technologies, media
Brunelleschi
architect, painter, sculptor, goldsmith; humanism-- human achievement separate from religious dogma; reconcile the classical view of human potential with Christian belief in divine intention; wanted excellence in human achievement-- all was possible
Renaissance 15th Century
began in Florence; authentic re-use of classicism, based in understanding of perspective, change size and proportion of columns, pediments, etc.; represent human intellect as much as the power of God
Villa Rotunda
c. 1500; Vincenza, Italy; Palladio
Louis Sullivan
celebrate and express verticality in high rises, use light curtain wall material; express 3 zones on facade
Palazzo
city house
Laurentian Library (1524)
complete challenge to Renaissance rules of order, proportion, and use of historic elements; goal = to heighten physical experience of moving through space; Michelangelo essentially manipulated classical architecture as elements in gigantic sculpture
Crystal Palace
designed by Joseph Paxton (1851); For World's Fair, London; made of modular parts that could be disassembled and resembled; standardized, made from industrial manufacturing processes; methodical organization of the building process used metal building technology
international style
designing buildings for the world; theoretically -- an abstract style that could fit anywhere
Frank Lloyd Wright stylistic developments
early work-- "arts and crafts" derived style; "prairie" style-- modern, horizontality, interwoven spaces; mature style-- more expressionistic
post-modernism -- influences social change
end belief in science to cure social ills; failure of science
F.L. Olmstead
father of landscape architecture in America
two thoughts from vitruvius
firmness, commodity, and delight, vitruivian figure
Foundling Hospital
first Renaissance building; Brunelleschi; Florence 1422
Pope Jullius II
humanist ideals introduced into the Papal court; Rome Queen city--consolidate temporal power; return to golry from Roman antiquity
Ideal city of Sforzinda
man is the center
Humanism
philosophical system based upon the capacity of humankind for rational, objective thought and action; stresses human reason and is centered in human nature, interests, and idealism as distinct from religious philosophies based in a higher God
Piazza
public square
Michelangelo (1475-1564)
rebelled against Renaissance decorum; adjusted proportions, details to suit his purpose; often made up his own details; painter (sistine chapel) sculptor (David, the Pieta) architect (Laurentian Library)
San Giorgio Maggiore
scaled to present a public face to the town of Venice
Bauhaus
school in Germany (founded in 1919 by Walter Gropius); huge influence on modern architecture; concept-- art, design, and construction are united (like Gothic arch); promoted "form follows function"; political purpose (housing for masses); about the collective
Brunelleschi: Father of the Renaissance
symmetrical forms; proportions relate one element to another; application scientific perspective
Renaissance
the activity, spirit or time of humanistic revival of classical art, literature, and learning originating in Italy in the 14th century and extending to the 17th century making the transition from the medieval to the modern world
Renaissance Architecture
the various adaptations of Italian Renaissance architecture that occurred throughout Europe until the advent of Mannerism and the Baroque in the 16th and 17th centuries, characterized by the use of Italian Renaissance forms and motifs in more or less traditional buildings
Leon Battista Alberti
theorist, historian, scientist and architect; another 10 books on architecture modeled on Vitruvius' Books; promote architecture as intellectual activity
Vitruvius
wrote "bible" for Renaissance architects; Roman architect and theorist, "the ten books on architecture"; the only complete book on architectural design and theory to survive from the ancient world; had enormous influence on Renaissance architecture