Brighton Pavilion Flashcards
Function?
Seaside retreat for the Prince Regent.
Original Marine Villa?
The building comprises the original skeleton of the neoclassical ‘Marine Villa’: a central rotunda and two flanking side wings.
Nash’s adaptations?
Extended the building –adding two additional square blocks (housing the
Banqueting room on the left and the Music room on the right) and smaller
recessed blocks at either end of both side wings.
Indo-Saracenic style?
Demonstrates the influence of the revivalist architectural style in the decorative
Indo-Islamic elements such as onion domes, pointed arches, pinnacles,
minarets and jalis. A British interpretation of a ‘classic’ Indian style.
Central Rotunda?
Houses the grand Saloon - comprised of four bay windows, articulated by tall
Indian pillars with jalis between them. Crowned by a large onion dome and two
flanking Islamic minarets that point heavenwards.
Jalis?
(Intended to provide shade in tropical heat), impart a sense of mystery, wrapped
like a lacy veil around the three main elements of the façade.
Flanking side wings?
Crowned with four smaller versions of the central onion dome. Each wing
features five floor-length windows separated by Indian pilasters which support
the first-floor balconies and Gothic ridge tiles.
Square blocks at either end of side wings?
Adorned with verrandahs and jalis and crowned with Chinese ‘tented’ roofs. Their concave outlines balance the convex central dome.
Smaller recessed blocks?
Crowned by domes and minarets, enhance the sense of symmetry.
Eclectic exoticism?
Incorporates elements of Gothic, Classical, Moorish, Hindu and Chinese
architecture –demonstrates the Orientalist tendency to imagine and generalise
the non-Western world.
Classical Unity?
Despite this, the east front has a feeling of sense of classical unity, emphasised
by repeated decorative elements.
Phantasmagoric quality?
Ten domes and ten minarets give the building a vertical thrust creating a dreamlike quality that reflects the decadent tastes of the Prince Regent
Romanticism?
The Pavilion reinforces Romantic tropes regarding the decadence and sensuality
of the ‘exotic’ in direct contrast to polite British society –perfectly suited to the
hedonistic function of the Regent’s pleasure palace.
‘Kubla Khan’?
Coleridge’s poem demonstrates similar Romantic attitudes towards the Orient.
Sezincote?
The Pavilion reflects the influence of the “Indian” exterior of Sezincote house