Palladio and Palladianism: World of Art Series: 0

Palladio and Palladianism: World of Art Series: 0

by RobertTavernor (Author)

Synopsis

Andrea Palladio, probably the most famous architect of the Western world, stands at the beginning of the movement called Palladianism. For the landed gentry of sixteenth-century Venice he evolved a version of Renaissance architecture, combining classical authority, dignity and comfort, which he made available to the whole of Europe in his book, the Quattro libri dell'architettura. So successful was the Palladian formula that it was consciously revived in other countries and in other times: by Inigo Jones at the court of Charles I in the early seventeenth century, by Colen Campbell and Lord Burlington in the early eighteenth century, and by Thomas Jefferson and others in the New World. In each case, what was appealing about Palladianism was more than a matter of style: it was the fact that it expressed a way of life and a humanist moral philosophy, deriving ultimately from ancient Rome but enriched by the thinkers of the Renaissance and the Augustan age.

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More Information

Format: Illustrated
Pages: 216
Edition: Illustrated
Publisher: Thames and Hudson Ltd
Published: 02 Apr 1991

ISBN 10: 0500202427
ISBN 13: 9780500202425
Book Overview: A must-have introduction to Palladianism by an authority on the subject

Media Reviews
'Tavernor has done a first-rate job' - Sir John Summerson, Architecture Today
Author Bio
Robert Tavernor is an English Emeritus Professor of Architecture and Urban Design at the London School of Economics and Political Science, and founding director of the Tavernor Consultancy in London