

Andrea Palladio
Andrea Palladio (
November 30,
1508 –
August 19,
1580), was an
Italian architect, widely considered the most influential person in the
history of Western architecture.
Biography
He was born
Andrea di Pietro della Gondola in
Padua, then part of the
Republic of Venice. Apprenticed as a stonecutter in Padua when he was 13, he broke his contract after only 18 months and fled to the nearby town of
Vicenza. Here he became an assistant in the leading workshop of stonecutters and masons. He frequented the workshop of Bartolomeo Cavazza, from whom he learned some of his skills.
His talents were recognized in his early thirties by Count
Gian Giorgio Trissino, who also gave him the name Palladio, an allusion to the
Greek goddess of wisdom
Pallas Athene. In
1541 he moved to
Rome to study
classic architecture.
The
Palladian style, named after him, adhered to classical
Roman principles, similarly to styles of the Early and
High Renaissance, when classical
revivalism was at its peak. His architectural works have "been valued for centuries as the quintessence of High Renaissance calm and harmony" (Watkin, D.,
A History of Western Architecture). Palladio designed many churches, villas, and palaces, especially in
Venice,
Vicenza and the surrounding area. A number of his works are protected as part of the
World Heritage Site Palladian Villas of the Veneto.
Palladio's work became well known after the publication of
I Quattro Libri dell'Architettura (The Four Books of Architecture) in 1570. Interest in his style was renewed in later generations and became fashionable all over Europe, for example in parts of the
Loire Valley of
France. In Britain,
Inigo Jones and
Christopher Wren embraced the Palladian style. Another admirer was the architect
Richard Boyle, 4th
Earl of Cork, also known as
Lord Burlington, who, with
William Kent, designed
Chiswick House.
Cultural context
Palladio was chosen by the most powerful members of the Venetian society for numerous important commissions. His success as an architect is based not only on the beauty of his work, but also for its harmony with the culture of his time. His success and influence was a result of the integration of extraordinary aesthetic quality with expressive characteristics that resonated with his client’s social aspirations. His buildings served to visually communicate their place in the social order of their culture. This integration of beauty and deep meaning is apparent in three major building types: the urban palazzo, the agricultural villa, and the church.
In his urban structures he developed a new improved version of the typical early
renaissance palazzo (exemplified by the
Palazzo Strozzi). Adapting a new urban palazzo type created by
Bramante in the House of Raphael, Palladio found a powerful expression of the importance of the owner and his social position. The main living quarters of the owner on the second level are now clearly distinguished in importance by use of a flattened classical portico, centered and raised above the subsidiary and utilitarian ground level (illustrated in the Palazzo da Porto Festa and the Palazzo Valmarana Braga). The tallness of the portico is achieved by incorporating the owner's sleeping quarters on the third level, within a giant two story classical colonnade, a motif adapted from
Michelangelo’s
Capitoline buildings in
Rome. The main floor level became known as the "
piano nobile", and is still referred to as the "first floor" in continental Europe.
Palladio also established an influential new building format for the agricultural villas of the Venetian aristocracy. He consolidated the various stand-alone farm outbuildings into a single impressive structure, arranged as a highly organized whole dominated by a strong center and symmetrical side wings, as illustrated at
Villa Barbaro. The Palladian villa configuration often consists of a centralized block raised on an elevated podium, accessed by grand steps and flanked by lower service wings, as at
Villa Foscari and
Villa Badoer. This format, with the quarters of the owner at the elevated center of their own universe, found resonance as a prototype for Italian villas and later for the country estates of the English nobility (such as Lord Burlington’s
Chiswick House, Vanbrugh’s
Blenheim, Walpole’s
Houghton Hall, and Adam’s Keddleston Hall]]. The configuration was a perfect architectural expression of their perceived position in the social order of the times. His influence was extended worldwide into the British colonies. The Palladian villa format can seen at
Thomas Jefferson’s
Monticello and as recently as 1940 in Pope’s
National Gallery in Washington DC, adapted to convey the importance of art. The
rustication of exposed basement walls of Victorian residences are a remnant of the Palladian podium.
Similarly, Palladio created a new configuration for the design of
Roman Catholic churches that established two interlocking architectural orders, each clearly articulated, yet delineating a hierarchy of a larger order overriding a lesser order. This idea was in direct coincidence with the rising acceptance of the theological ideas of St.
Thomas Aquinas, who postulated the notion of two worlds existing simultaneously: the divine world of faith and the earthly world of man. Palladio created an architecture, which made a visual statement communicating the idea of two superimposed systems, as illustrated at
San Francesco Della Vigna. In a time when religious dominance in Western culture was threatened by the rising power of science and secular humanists, this architecture found great favor with the Church as a clear statement of the proper relationship of the earthly and the spiritual worlds.
Influence
Palladio's importance was far reaching. Other exponents of his work who helped to popularize Palladio's concepts include the
18th century Venetian architect
Giacomo Leoni who published an authoritative four volume work on Palladio and his architectural concepts.
Palladio died in
Maser, near
Treviso.
Chronology
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An architect is a person who is involved in the planning, designing and oversight of a building's construction. The word "architect" (Latin: architectus) derives from the Greek arkhitekton (arkhi (chief) + tekton (builder))")[1]
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Country Italy
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Most Serene Republic of Venice (Italian: Serenissima Repubblica di Venezia, Venetian: Republica de Venesia
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Country Italy
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Gian Giorgio Trissino (July 8, 1478 - December 8, 1550) was an Italian Renaissance humanist, poet, dramatist, diplomat and grammarian.
Biography
Trissino was born of a patrician family at Vicenza in 1478.
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The term Classical Architecture has a specific archaeological meaning, relating to the architecture of Classical Greece. However the term is used by architectural historians to refer to a number of styles derived, directly or loosely, from this source.
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Palladian architecture is a European style of architecture derived from the designs of the Italian architect Andrea Palladio (1508–1580). The term "Palladian" normally refers to buildings in a style inspired by Palladio's own work; that which is recognised as Palladian
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Architecture of Ancient Rome adopted the external language of classical Greek architecture for their own purposes, which were so different from Greek buildings as to create a new architectural style. The two styles are often considered one body of classical architecture.
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City centre of Vicenza and the Palladian Villas of the Veneto are a cluster of works by Andrea Palladio and his students which were inscribed on the World Heritage List in 1994 and expanded two years later.
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I Quattro Libri dell'Architettura (The Four Books of Architecture) was published in 1570, in four volumes written by the architect Andrea Palladio (1508-1580), whose name is identified with an architectural movement named after him known as Palladian architecture.
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State Party France
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MottoLiberté, Égalité, Fraternité"Liberty, Equality, Fraternity"
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..... Click the link for more information. Inigo Jones (July 15, 1573 – June 21, 1652) is regarded as the first significant English architect, and the first to bring Renaissance architecture to England. He also made valuable contributions to stage design.
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Sir Christopher Wren
Sir Christopher Wren in Godfrey Kneller's 1711 portrait
Born 20 September 1632(1632--)
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Richard Boyle, 3rd Earl of Burlington and 4th Earl of Cork PC (April 25, 1694 – December 15, 1753), born in Yorkshire, England was a descendant of Richard Boyle, 1st Earl of Cork.
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