Baroque architecture

67,589 views 30 slides Feb 02, 2014
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About This Presentation

New version of Baroque but with images.


Slide Content

BAROQUE ARCHITECTURE
Revision

Cronology and geography
•From the end of 16th century until 1750.
•Geography: whole Europe+ America.
•Characteristics of the period:
–Religious and political conflicts
–Geographical colonization
–Scientific development
–New astrological discoveries Sun centre of Universe

Baroque Style
•The word means imperfection
•New naturalism that reflects the scientific
advances
•Taste for dramatic action and emotion:
–Colour and light contrasted
–Rich textures
–Asymmetrical spaces
–Diagonal plans
–New subjects: landscape, genre, still-life

Baroque Style
•Variety within the style
•Art at the service of power
•Two main centres:
–Rome: Pope’s authority
–France: powerful monarchy
•Influence of the Counter-Reform
•Worry about plastic values

Architecture: Characteristics
•Long narrow naves replaced by broader or circular
forms
•Dramatic use of light

Architecture: Characteristics
•Dramatic use of light
•Large-scale ceiling frescoes

Architecture: Characteristics
•Large-scale ceiling frescoes
•Interior a shell for painting and sculpture

Architecture: Characteristics
•Illusory effects
•Ekialdeko Europan tipula-kupulak

Architecture: Italy
•They evolved from the Renaissance forms
•Movement toward grand structures with flowing,
curving shapes
•Landscape was frequently incorporated
•New elements as gardens, squares , courtyards and
fountains.
•Influence of the rebuilding of Saint Peter, in which
classical forms integrated with the city.

Architecture: Italy
•Maderno
–He made the Vatican’s façade
–His work destroyed partially Michelangelo’s design
–His work combined the dome with the creation of an space
where the Pope could appear publicaly
–Other works:
•Santa maria della Vittoria
•Palazzo Barberini

Vaticano’s façade
Santa Maria della Vittoria
Palazzo Barberini

Architecture: Italy
•Longhena
–He worked mainly in Venice
–His design was selected for building Santa Maria della
Salute
–It is building of central plan with a great dome that
became the symbol of Venice.

Ca’ Rezzonico
Santa Maria of Nazaret
Santa Maria della Salute

Architecture: Italy
•Bernini
–He created a fusion of architecture, painting and sculpture
–He used false perspective and trompe-l’ oeil to impact
–He used a palace façade that became a model with massive pilasters
above a rusticated base.
–Works:
•Saint Peter’s square
•Baldaquin

San Peter’s colomnade
San Pete’r Baldaquine

Architecture: Italy
•Borromini
–His works spring from the contrast between convention
and freedom
–He used tradition as a basis, but not as a law
–Works:
•San Carlo alle Quattro Fontane
•San Carlo Borromeo
•Oratorio degli Fillipenses

San Carlo alle quattro fontane
San Ivo’s dome

Oratorio degli Filipensi
Palacio Spada (trompe l’oeil)
Stairs

Architecture: France
•It was elegant, ordered, rational and restraided
•It is a rectilinear model, closer to classicism
•It aimed at showing the power of Louis XIV
monarchy.
•The main works are:
–Louvre: Le Vau and Perrault
–Versailles: Le Brun, Le Vau, Le Notre

Louvre palace

Versailles palace

Architecture: Central Europe
•It began later due to the Thirty Years’ War
•Austria developed the Imperial style with Fischer von Erlach
and Hildebrandt
•In Germany, in the Catholic South Jesuit models were
followed while in the Protestant North works were less
important
•Palace architecture was important in the whole area

Fisher von Erlach: Karlskirtche and Schönbrunn
Hildebrandt: Belvedere palace

Architecture: England and Russia
•In England is important Wren
•Baroque was the style used to design town planning
•In Russia it is very decorative, in quite traditional
churches sometimes made of brick; later it was
imported from the Low Countries and finally it
became an extravagant art.

Wren: San Paul
Wren: Cambridge
Emmanuel chapel
Cambridge library

Architecture: Spain
•At the beginning it continued the pattern of the
Escorial
•Decoration tends to concentrate just in the façade
•The Rococo was the time of the development of the
Churrigueresque style, with exaggerated decoration
around the door
•The Plateresque (last Renaissance that imitates the
work on silver) and the Churrigueresque were
exported to America, mainly to Mexico.

Jose Benito Churriguera: Salamanca’s
San Esteban convent altarpiece
Alberto Churriguera: Salamanca’s main
square

Rococo
•French style for interior decoration
•It developped mainly at the end of 1720
•It was used in other countries as a French Style
•Characteristics:
–Galante: luxurious things
–Contraste: asymmety
–Chinoiserie: exotic character imitating Chinese arts

Rococo Architecture
•It caught the public taste
•Small and curious buildings
•Elegant parlours, dainty sitting-rooms and boudoirs
•Walls, ceiling, furniture and works of metal as decoration
•Ensemble of sportive, fantastic and sculptured forms
•Horizontal lines almost completely supressed
•Shell-like curves
•Walls covered by stucco
•White and bright colours.