Renaissance Flashcards
1
Q
Characteristics of Renaissance Architecture
A
- not based on church tradition but on mathematical clarity and rationality
- no need to point heavenward, but rather a balanced vertical and horizontal elements to reflect human proportions
- visually clear and rationally organized
- square and circles became the basic modules, using the Classical columns, arches, and entablatures from the Romans
2
Q
Vitruvius Ideal form
A
- symmetry and proportion were critical
- ideal systems of proportions can be found in the human body
3
Q
Fillipo Brunelleschi
A
- Renaissance artist
- founder of the new Renaissance Style
- rediscovered 3-d perspective drawing using mathematical scheme
4
Q
Examples of Renaissance architecture
A
- Opedale degli Innocenti by Brunelleschi, in Florence, 15th c.
- Dome of Santa Maria della Fiore by Brunelleschi, in Florence, 15th c.
- Church of San Lorenzo in Florence by Brunelleschi, 15th c.
- Santa Maria della Carceri, in Prato, by Brunelleschi, 15th c.
- San Francesco by Alberti, in Rimini, 15th c.
- Sant’ Andrea by Alberti, in Mantua, 15th c.
- San Pietro by Bramante, in Vaticano Rome, 16th c.
- Villa Badoer by Palladio, in Fratta Polesine, 16th c.
- Villa Capra by Palladio, near Vincenza, 16th c.
5
Q
Ospedale degli Innocenti
A
- in Florence, 15th c., by Brunelleschi
- first example to depict mathematical proportions
- columns are spaced exactly as they are tall, resulting in square elevations
- columns are as far from the wall as they are high, resulting in cubed spaces
- arches are half as high as columns
6
Q
Mannerism’s characteristics
A
- Rational order
- Absolute balance
- purity
BUT, variations and deviations started to appear that gave tensions and playfulness in the designs
7
Q
Examples of Mannerism
A
- Pallazzo del Te by Romano, in Mantua, 16th c.
2. House of the Architect by Romano, in Mantua, 16th c.
8
Q
Development of Technology in Renaissance
A
- Birth of chemistry and physics
- Development of calculus
- Explorations in anatomy
- New sources of powers are used, wind and Water
- Development of mechanical clocks
9
Q
Examples of Baroque Architecture
A
- Santi Vincenzo e Anastasio by Lunghi, in Rome, 17th c.
- Santa Maria della Vittoria by Bernini, in Rome, 17th c.
- Piazza de Saint-Peter by Bernini, in Rome, 17th c.
- San Carlo alle Quattro Fontane by Borromini, in Rome 17th c.
- Sant’ Ivo della Sapienza in Rome, 17th c.
10
Q
Examples of Renaissance beyond Italy
A
- Chateau de Versailles by Louis le Vau, 17th c.
- Chateau Azay-le-Rideau, in Loire Valley, 16th c.
- Banqueting House, Palace at Whitehall by Inigo Jones, in London, 7th c.
- Blenheim Palace by Vanbrugh and Hawksmoor, in Oxfordshire, 18th c.
- Saint-Paul’s Cathedral by Christopher Wren, in England, 17th c.