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Palladian architecture

Palladian architecture is a European architectural style derived from the work of the Venetian architect Andrea Palladio (1508–1580). What is today recognised as Palladian architecture evolved from his concepts of symmetry, perspective and the principles of formal classical architecture from ancient Greek and Roman traditions. In the 17th and 18th centuries, Palladio's interpretation of this classical architecture developed into the style known as Palladianism.

A villa with a superimposed portico, from Book IV of Palladio's I quattro libri dell'architettura, in an English translation published in London, 1736
Plan for Palladio's Villa La Rotonda (c. 1565) – features of the house were incorporated in numerous Palladian-style houses throughout Europe over the following centuries.

Palladianism emerged in England in the early 17th century, led by Inigo Jones, whose Queen's House at Greenwich has been described as the first English Palladian building. Its development faltered at the onset of the English Civil War. After the Stuart Restoration, the architectural landscape was dominated by the more flamboyant English Baroque. Palladianism returned to fashion after a reaction against the Baroque in the early 18th century, fuelled by the publication of a number of architectural books, including Palladio's own I quattro libri dell'architettura (The Four Books of Architecture) and Colen Campbell's Vitruvius Britannicus. Campbell's book included illustrations of Wanstead House, a building he designed on the outskirts of London and one of the largest and most influential of the early neo-Palladian houses. The movement's resurgence was championed by Richard Boyle, 3rd Earl of Burlington, whose buildings for himself, such as Chiswick House and Burlington House, became celebrated. Burlington sponsored the career of the artist, architect and landscaper William Kent, and their joint creation, Holkham Hall in Norfolk, has been described as "the most splendid Palladian house in England".[1] By the middle of the century Palladianism had become almost the national architectural style, epitomised by Kent's Horse Guards at the centre of the nation's capital.

The Palladian style was also widely used throughout Europe, often in response to English influences. In Prussia the critic and courtier Francesco Algarotti corresponded with Burlington about his efforts to persuade Frederick the Great of the merits of the style, while Knobelsdorff's opera house in Berlin on the Unter den Linden, begun in 1741, was based on Campbell's Wanstead House. Later in the century, when the style was losing favour in Europe, Palladianism had a surge in popularity throughout the British colonies in North America. Thomas Jefferson sought out Palladian examples, which themselves drew on buildings from the time of the Roman Republic, to develop a new architectural style for the American Republic. Examples include the Hammond–Harwood House in Maryland and Jefferson's own house, Monticello, in Virginia. The Palladian style was also adopted in other British colonies, including those in the Indian subcontinent.

In the 19th century, Palladianism was overtaken in popularity by Neoclassical architecture in both Europe and in North America. By the middle of that century, both were challenged and then superseded by the Gothic Revival in the English-speaking world, whose champions such as Augustus Pugin, remembering the origins of Palladianism in ancient temples, deemed the style too pagan for true Christian worship. In the 20th and 21st centuries, Palladianism has continued to evolve as an architectural style; its pediments, symmetry and proportions are evident in the design of many modern buildings, while its inspirer is regularly cited as having been among the world's most influential architects.

Palladio's architecture

 
"True Palladianism" at the Villa Godi (1537–1542) – from Palladio's I quattro libri dell'architettura. The flanking pavilions are agricultural buildings not part of the villa. In the 18th century, the connecting colonnades evolved as enfilades of rooms while the pavilions often became self-contained wings or blocks – a common feature of 18th century Palladianism

Andrea Palladio was born in Padua in 1508, the son of a stonemason.[2] He was inspired by Roman buildings, the writings of Vitruvius (80 BC), and his immediate predecessors Donato Bramante and Raphael. Palladio aspired to an architectural style that used symmetry and proportion to emulate the grandeur of classical buildings.[3] His surviving buildings are in Venice, Veneto region, and Vicenza,[4] and include villas and churches such as the Basilica del Redentore in Venice.[5] Palladio's architectural treatises follow the approach defined by Vitruvius and his 15th-century disciple Leon Battista Alberti, who adhered to principles of classical Roman architecture based on mathematical proportions rather than the ornamental style of the Renaissance.[6] Palladio recorded and publicised his work in the 1570 four-volume illustrated study, I quattro libri dell'architettura (The Four Books of Architecture).[7]

Palladio's villas are designed to fit with their setting.[8] If on a hill, such as Villa Almerico Capra Valmarana (Villa Capra, or La Rotonda), façades were of equal value so that occupants could enjoy views in all directions.[9] Porticos were built on all sides to enable the residents to appreciate the countryside while remaining protected from the sun.[10][n 1] Palladio sometimes used a loggia as an alternative to the portico. This is most simply described as a recessed portico, or an internal single storey room with pierced walls that are open to the elements. Occasionally a loggia would be placed at second floor level over the top of another loggia, creating what was known as a double loggia.[12] Loggias were sometimes given significance in a façade by being surmounted by a pediment. Villa Godi's focal point is a loggia rather than a portico, with loggias terminating each end of the main building.[13]

 
Villa Capra "La Rotonda" (begun c. 1565) – one of Palladio's most influential designs

Palladio would often model his villa elevations on Roman temple façades. The temple influence, often in a cruciform design, later became a trademark of his work.[14][n 2] Palladian villas are usually built with three floors: a rusticated basement or ground floor, containing the service and minor rooms; above this, the piano nobile (noble level), accessed through a portico reached by a flight of external steps, containing the principal reception and bedrooms; and lastly a low mezzanine floor with secondary bedrooms and accommodation. The proportions of each room (for example, height and width) within the villa were calculated on simple mathematical ratios like 3:4 and 4:5. The arrangement of the different rooms within the house, and the external façades, were similarly determined.[15][n 3] Earlier architects had used these formulas for balancing a single symmetrical façade; however, Palladio's designs related to the entire structure.[13] Palladio set out his views in I quattro libri dell'architettura: "beauty will result from the form and correspondence of the whole, with respect to the several parts, of the parts with regard to each other, and of these again to the whole; that the structure may appear an entire and complete body, wherein each member agrees with the other, and all necessary to compose what you intend to form."[17]

Palladio considered the dual purpose of his villas as the centres of farming estates and weekend retreats.[18] These symmetrical temple-like houses often have equally symmetrical, but low, wings sweeping away from them to accommodate horses, farm animals, and agricultural stores.[19] The wings, sometimes detached and connected to the villa by colonnades, were designed not only to be functional but also to complement and accentuate the villa. Palladio did not intend them to be part of the main house, but the development of the wings to become integral parts of the main building – undertaken by Palladio's followers in the 18th century – became one of the defining characteristics of Palladianism.[20]

Venetian and Palladian windows

 
Basilica Palladiana, Vicenza (from 1546) – loggia with Palladian windows

Palladian, Serlian,[n 4] or Venetian windows are a trademark of Palladio's early career. There are two different versions of the motif: the simpler one is called a Venetian window, and the more elaborate a Palladian window or "Palladian motif", although this distinction is not always observed.[22]

The Venetian window has three parts: a central high round-arched opening, and two smaller rectangular openings to the sides. The side windows are topped by lintels and supported by columns.[23] This is derived from the ancient Roman triumphal arch, and was first used outside Venice by Donato Bramante and later mentioned by Sebastiano Serlio (1475–1554) in his seven-volume architectural book Tutte l'opere d'architettura et prospetiva (All the Works of Architecture and Perspective) expounding the ideals of Vitruvius and Roman architecture.[24] It can be used in series, but is often only used once in a façade, as at New Wardour Castle,[25] or once at each end, as on the inner façade of Burlington House (true Palladian windows).[26][n 5]

Palladio's elaboration of this, normally used in a series, places a larger or giant order in between each window, and doubles the small columns supporting the side lintels, placing the second column behind rather than beside the first. This was introduced in the Biblioteca Marciana in Venice by Jacopo Sansovino (1537), and heavily adopted by Palladio in the Basilica Palladiana in Vicenza,[28] where it is used on both storeys; this feature was less often copied. The openings in this elaboration are not strictly windows, as they enclose a loggia. Pilasters might replace columns, as in other contexts. Sir John Summerson suggests that the omission of the doubled columns may be allowed, but the term "Palladian motif" should be confined to cases where the larger order is present.[29]

 
Claydon House (begun 1757) – the Venetian window in the central bay is surrounded by a unifying blind arch[30]

Palladio used these elements extensively, for example in very simple form in his entrance to Villa Forni Cerato.[31] It is perhaps this extensive use of the motif in the Veneto that has given the window its alternative name of the Venetian window. Whatever the name or the origin, this form of window has become one of the most enduring features of Palladio's work seen in the later architectural styles evolved from Palladianism.[32][n 6] According to James Lees-Milne, its first appearance in Britain was in the remodelled wings of Burlington House, London, where the immediate source was in the English court architect Inigo Jones's designs for Whitehall Palace rather than drawn from Palladio himself. Lees-Milne describes the Burlington window as "the earliest example of the revived Venetian window in England".[34]

A variant, in which the motif is enclosed within a relieving blind arch that unifies the motif, is not Palladian, though Richard Boyle seems to have assumed it was so, in using a drawing in his possession showing three such features in a plain wall. Modern scholarship attributes the drawing to Vincenzo Scamozzi.[n 7] Burlington employed the motif in 1721 for an elevation of Tottenham Park in Savernake Forest for his brother-in-law Lord Bruce (since remodelled).[36][n 8] William Kent picked it up in his designs for the Houses of Parliament, and it appears in his executed designs for the north front of Holkham Hall.[38] Another example is Claydon House, in Buckinghamshire; the remaining fragment is one wing of what was intended to be one of two flanking wings to a vast Palladian house. The scheme was never completed and parts of what was built have since been demolished.[30]

Early Palladianism

 
The Queen's House, Greenwich (begun 1616) – Inigo Jones's masterpiece[39]

During the 17th century, many architects studying in Italy learned of Palladio's work, and on returning home adopted his style, leading to its widespread use across Europe and North America.[40][41] Isolated forms of Palladianism throughout the world were brought about in this way, although the style did not reach the zenith of its popularity until the 18th century.[42] An early reaction to the excesses of Baroque architecture in Venice manifested itself as a return to Palladian principles. The earliest neo-Palladians there were the exact contemporaries Domenico Rossi (1657–1737)[n 9] and Andrea Tirali (1657–1737).[n 10] Their biographer, Tommaso Temanza, proved to be the movement's most able proponent; in his writings, Palladio's visual inheritance became increasingly codified and moved towards neoclassicism.[44]

The most influential follower of Palladio was Inigo Jones, who travelled throughout Italy with the art collector Earl of Arundel in 1613–1614, annotating his copy of Palladio's treatise.[45][n 11][n 12] The "Palladianism" of Jones and his contemporaries and later followers was a style largely of façades, with the mathematical formulae dictating layout not strictly applied. A handful of country houses in England built between 1640 and 1680 are in this style.[48][49] These follow the success of Jones's Palladian designs for the Queen's House at Greenwich,[50] the first English Palladian house,[51] and the Banqueting House at Whitehall, the uncompleted royal palace in London of Charles I.[52]

Palladian designs advocated by Jones were too closely associated with the court of Charles I to survive the turmoil of the English Civil War.[53][54] Following the Stuart restoration, Jones's Palladianism was eclipsed by the Baroque designs of such architects as William Talman,[55] Sir John Vanbrugh, Nicholas Hawksmoor, and Jones's pupil John Webb.[56][57]

Neo-Palladianism

English Palladian architecture

 
Wanstead House (1722) – among the first, and largest, of the Neo-Palladian houses; the image is from Colen Campbell's Vitruvius Britannicus.

The Baroque style proved highly popular in continental Europe, but was often viewed with suspicion in England, where it was considered "theatrical, exuberant and Catholic."[58][59] It was superseded in Britain in the first quarter of the 18th century when four books highlighted the simplicity and purity of classical architecture.[60][61] These were:

The most favoured among patrons was the four-volume Vitruvius Britannicus by Campbell,[64][65][n 13] The series contains architectural prints of British buildings inspired by the great architects from Vitruvius to Palladio; at first mainly those of Inigo Jones, but the later works contained drawings and plans by Campbell and other 18th-century architects.[67][n 14] These four books greatly contributed to Palladian architecture becoming established in 18th-century Britain.[69] Campbell and Kent became the most fashionable and sought-after architects of the era. Campbell had placed his 1715 designs for the colossal Wanstead House near to the front of Vitruvius Britannicus, immediately following the engravings of buildings by Jones and Webb, "as an exemplar of what new architecture should be".[70] On the strength of the book, Campbell was chosen as the architect for Henry Hoare I's Stourhead house.[71] Hoare's brother-in-law, William Benson, had designed Wilbury House, the earliest 18th-century Palladian house in Wiltshire, which Campbell had also illustrated in Vitruvius Britannicus.[72][n 15]

 
Holkham Hall, South front (1734) – the four flanking wings are elevated, in height and importance, almost to the status of the central block.

At the forefront of the new school of design was the "architect earl", Richard Boyle, 3rd Earl of Burlington, according to Dan Cruikshank the "man responsible for this curious elevation of Palladianism to the rank of a quasi-religion".[74][75][n 16] In 1729 he and Kent designed Chiswick House.[77][78] This house was a reinterpretation of Palladio's Villa Capra, but purified of 16th century elements and ornament.[79] This severe lack of ornamentation was to be a feature of English Palladianism.[80]

In 1734 Kent and Burlington designed Holkham Hall in Norfolk.[81][82] James Stevens Curl considers it "the most splendid Palladian house in England".[1] The main block of the house followed Palladio's dictates, but his low, often detached, wings of farm buildings were elevated in significance. Kent attached them to the design, banished the farm animals, and elevated the wings to almost the same importance as the house itself.[83] It was the development of the flanking wings that was to cause English Palladianism to evolve from being a pastiche of Palladio's original work. Wings were frequently adorned with porticos and pediments, often resembling, as at the much later Kedleston Hall, small country houses in their own right.[84][n 17]

 
Woburn Abbey (1746) – designed by Burlington's student Henry Flitcroft and showing further development of the wings

Architectural styles evolve and change to suit the requirements of each individual client. When in 1746 the Duke of Bedford decided to rebuild Woburn Abbey, he chose the fashionable Palladian style, and selected the architect Henry Flitcroft, a protégé of Burlington.[85][86] Flitcroft's designs, while Palladian in nature, had to comply with the Duke's determination that the plan and footprint of the earlier house, originally a Cistercian monastery, be retained.[87] The central block is small, has only three bays, while the temple-like portico is merely suggested, and is closed. Two great flanking wings containing a vast suite of state rooms[88] replace the walls or colonnades which should have connected to the farm buildings;[n 18] the farm buildings terminating the structure are elevated in height to match the central block and given Palladian windows, to ensure they are seen as of Palladian design.[90] This development of the style was to be repeated in many houses and town halls in Britain over one hundred years. Often the terminating blocks would have blind porticos and pilasters themselves, competing for attention with, or complementing the central block. This was all very far removed from the designs of Palladio two hundred years earlier. Falling from favour during the Victorian era, the approach was revived by Sir Aston Webb for his refacing of Buckingham Palace in 1913.[91][n 19]

The villa tradition continued throughout the late 18th century, particularly in the suburbs around London. Sir William Chambers built many examples, such as Parkstead House.[94] But the grander English Palladian houses were no longer the small but exquisite weekend retreats that their Italian counterparts were intended as. They had become "power houses", in Sir John Summerson's words, the symbolic centres of the triumph and dominance of the Whig Oligarchy who ruled Britain unchallenged for some fifty years after the death of Queen Anne.[95][96] Summerson thought Kent's Horse Guards on Whitehall epitomised "the establishment of Palladianism as the official style of Great Britain".[63] As the style peaked, thoughts of mathematical proportion were swept away. Rather than square houses with supporting wings, these buildings had the length of the façade as their major consideration: long houses often only one room deep were deliberately deceitful in giving a false impression of size.[97]

Irish Palladian architecture

 
Castletown House (1722) – an Irish Palladian house where the wings flank, but are separate from the house and are joined by colonnades, closely following Palladio's approach

During the Palladian revival period in Ireland, even modest mansions were cast in a neo-Palladian mould. Irish Palladian architecture subtly differs from the England style. While adhering as in other countries to the basic ideals of Palladio, it is often truer to them.[98] In Ireland, Palladianism became political; both the original and the present Irish parliaments in Dublin occupy Palladian buildings.[99][n 20]

The Irish architect Sir Edward Lovett Pearce (1699–1733) became a leading advocate.[101] He was a cousin of Sir John Vanbrugh, and originally one of his pupils. He rejected the Baroque style, and spent three years studying architecture in France and Italy before returning to Ireland. His most important Palladian work is the former Irish Houses of Parliament in Dublin.[102] Christine Casey, in her 2005 volume Dublin, in the Pevsner Buildings of Ireland series, considers the building, "arguably the most accomplished public set-piece of the Palladian style in [Britain]".[103] Pearce was a prolific architect who went on to design the southern façade of Drumcondra House in 1725[104] and Summerhill House in 1731,[105] which was completed after his death by Richard Cassels.[106] Pearce also oversaw the building of Castletown House near Dublin, designed by the Italian architect Alessandro Galilei (1691–1737).[98] It is perhaps the only Palladian house in Ireland built with Palladio's mathematical ratios, and one of a number of Irish mansions which inspired the design of the White House in Washington, D.C.[107]

Other examples include Russborough, designed by Richard Cassels,[108] who also designed the Palladian Rotunda Hospital in Dublin and Florence Court in County Fermanagh.[97] Irish Palladian country houses often feature robust Rococo plasterwork – an Irish specialty which was frequently executed by the Lafranchini brothers and far more flamboyant than the interiors of their contemporaries in England.[109] In the 20th century, during and following the Irish War of Independence and the subsequent civil war, large numbers of Irish country houses, including some fine Palladian examples such as Woodstock House,[110] were abandoned to ruin or destroyed.[111][112][113][n 21]

North American Palladian architecture

 
Hammond-Harwood House (1774) – modelled after the Villa Pisani from I quattro libri dell'architettura

Palladio's influence in North America is evident almost from its first architect-designed buildings.[n 22] The Irish philosopher George Berkeley, who may be America's first recorded Palladian, bought a large farmhouse in Middletown, Rhode Island, in the late 1720s, and added a Palladian doorcase derived from Kent's Designs of Inigo Jones (1727), which he may have brought with him from London.[119] Palladio's work was included in the library of a thousand volumes amassed for Yale College.[120] Peter Harrison’s 1749 designs for the Redwood Library in Newport, Rhode Island, borrow directly from Palladio's I quattro libri dell'architettura, while his plan for the Newport Brick Market, conceived a decade later, is also Palladian.[121]

Two colonial period houses that can be definitively attributed to designs from I quattro libri dell'architettura are the Hammond-Harwood House (1774) in Annapolis, Maryland, and Thomas Jefferson's first Monticello (1770). Hammond-Harwood was designed by the architect William Buckland in 1773–1774 for the wealthy farmer Matthias Hammond of Anne Arundel County, Maryland. The design source is the Villa Pisani,[122] and that for the first Monticello, the Villa Cornaro at Piombino Dese.[123] Both are taken from Book II, Chapter XIV of I quattro libri dell'architettura.[124] Jefferson later made substantial alterations to Monticello, known as the second Monticello (1802–1809),[125] making the Hammond-Harwood House the only remaining house in North America modelled directly on a Palladian design.[126][127]

 
Thomas Jefferson's Monticello (1772)

Jefferson referred to I quattro libri dell'architettura as his bible.[n 23] Although a statesman, his passion was architecture,[130] and he developed an intense appreciation of Palladio's architectural concepts; his designs for the James Barbour Barboursville estate, the Virginia State Capitol, and the University of Virginia campus were all based on illustrations from Palladio's book.[131][132][n 24] Realising the political significance of ancient Roman architecture to the fledgling American Republic, Jefferson designed his civic buildings, such as The Rotunda,[134] in the Palladian style, echoing in his buildings for the new republic examples from the old.[135]

In Virginia and Carolina, the Palladian style is found in numerous plantation houses, such as Stratford Hall,[136] Westover Plantation[137] and Drayton Hall.[138] Westover's north and south entrances, made of imported English Portland stone, were patterned after a plate in William Salmon's Palladio Londinensis (1734).[139][n 25] The distinctive feature of Drayton Hall, its two-storey portico, was derived from Palladio,[141] as was Mount Airy, in Richmond County, Virginia, built in 1758–1762.[142] A particular feature of American Palladianism was the re-emergence of the great portico which, as in Italy, fulfilled the need of protection from the sun; the portico in various forms and size became a dominant feature of American colonial architecture. In the north European countries the portico had become a mere symbol, often closed, or merely hinted at in the design by pilasters, and sometimes in very late examples of English Palladianism adapted to become a porte-cochère; in America, the Palladian portico regained its full glory.[143]

The White House in Washington, D.C., was inspired by Irish Palladianism.[107] Its architect James Hoban, who built the executive mansion between 1792 and 1800, was born in Callan, County Kilkenny, in 1762, the son of tenant farmers on the estate of Desart Court, a Palladian House designed by Pearce.[144] He studied architecture in Dublin, where Leinster House (built c. 1747) was one of the finest Palladian buildings of the time.[107] Both Cassel's Leinster House and James Wyatt's Castle Coole have been cited as Hoban's inspirations for the White House but the more neoclassical design of that building, particularly of the South façade which closely resembles Wyatt's 1790 design for Castle Coole, suggests that Coole is perhaps the more direct progenitor. The architectural historian Gervase Jackson-Stops describes Castle Coole as "a culmination of the Palladian traditions, yet strictly neoclassical in its chaste ornament and noble austerity",[145] while Alistair Rowan, in his 1979 volume, North West Ulster, of the Buildings of Ireland series, suggests that, at Coole, Wyatt designed a building, "more massy, more masculine and more totally liberated from Palladian practice than anything he had done before."[146]

Because of its later development, Palladian architecture in Canada is rarer. In her 1984 study, Palladian Style in Canadian Architecture, Nathalie Clerk notes its particular impact on public architecture, as opposed to the private houses in the United States.[147] One example of historical note is the Nova Scotia Legislature building, completed in 1819.[148] Another example is Government House in St. John's, Newfoundland.[149]

Palladianism elsewhere

The rise of neo-Palladianism in England contributed to its adoption in Prussia. Count Francesco Algarotti wrote to Lord Burlington to inform him that he was recommending to Frederick the Great the adoption in his own country of the architectural style Burlington had introduced in England.[150] By 1741, Georg Wenzeslaus von Knobelsdorff had already begun construction of the Berlin Opera House on the Unter den Linden, based on Campbell's Wanstead House.[151]

Palladianism was particularly adopted in areas under British colonial rule. Examples can be seen in the Indian subcontinent; the Raj Bhavan, Kolkata (formerly Government House) was modelled on Kedleston Hall,[152] while the architectural historian Pilar Maria Guerrieri identifies its influences in Lutyens' Delhi.[153] In South Africa, Federico Freschi notes the "Tuscan colonnades and Palladian windows" of Herbert Baker’s Union Buildings.[154]

Legacy

 
Henbury Hall, Cheshire (1986) – 20th century Palladianism modelled on the Villa Capra[155]

By the 1770s, British architects such as Robert Adam and William Chambers were in high demand, but were now drawing on a wide variety of classical sources, including from ancient Greece, so much so that their forms of architecture became defined as neoclassical rather than Palladian.[156][157] In Europe, the Palladian revival ended by the close of the 18th century. In the 19th century, proponents of the Gothic Revival such as Augustus Pugin, remembering the origins of Palladianism in ancient temples, considered it pagan, and unsuited to Anglican and Anglo-Catholic worship.[158][159][n 26] In North America, Palladianism lingered a little longer; Thomas Jefferson's floor plans and elevations owe a great deal to Palladio's I quattro libri dell'architettura.[161]

The term Palladian is often misused in modern discourse and tends to be used to describe buildings with any classical pretensions.[162][163] There was a revival of a more serious Palladian approach in the 20th century when Colin Rowe, an influential architectural theorist, published his essay, The Mathematics of the Ideal Villa, (1947), in which he drew links between the compositional "rules" in Palladio's villas and Le Corbusier's villas at Poissy and Garches.[164][165] Suzanne Walters' article The Two Faces of Modernism suggests a continuing influence of Palladio's ideas on architects of the 20th century.[166][n 27] In the 21st century Palladio's name regularly appears among the world's most influential architects.[168][169][170] In England, Raymond Erith (1904–1973) drew on Palladian inspirations, and was followed in this by his pupil, subsequently partner, Quinlan Terry.[171] Their work, and that of others,[155] led the architectural historian John Martin Robinson to suggest that "the Quattro Libri continues as the fountainhead of at least one strand in the English country house tradition."[172][n 28][n 29]

See also

Notes, references and sources

Notes

  1. ^ Palladio's description of the Villa Capra includes the commentary; "One enjoys the most beautiful views on all sides and for this reason, porticos have been built on all four sides."[11]
  2. ^ Giles Worsley, in his study Inigo Jones and the European Classicist Tradition, writes; "The portico is so strongly associated today with the country house, and specifically with Palladio's villas, it is easy to forget that, outside of the Veneto, it was principally associated with religious buildings until the late seventeenth century".[10]
  3. ^ Wundram and Pape describe Palladio's approach in the chapter on the Villa Capra in their 2004 study, Palladio: The Complete Buildings; "The proportions and principles become clear in the ground-plan with positively mathematical precision. The porticos take up half the width of the cubical central building. The column entrance halls and flights of steps each correspond to half the depth of the core of the building. In other words, the sum of the four porticos and flights of steps covers the same area as the main building."[16]
  4. ^ After Sebastiano Serlio (1475–1554), an architect and illustrator whose L'Architetturra was a model for Palladio's I quattro libri dell'architettura.[21]
  5. ^ The architectural historian Timothy Mowl notes that the placing of the Venetian windows in each end bay was, in fact, "something Palladio never did."[27]
  6. ^ A notable example in America is the Palladian window set into the north front of Mount Vernon, George Washington’s home in Virginia. The centrepiece of the New Room, and installed during Washington’s second rebuilding, the window draws heavily on a design from Batty Langley’s City and Country Builder’s and Workman’s Treasury of Designs, published in 1750.[33]
  7. ^ Inigo Jones met Scamozzi in Venice in 1613–1614 and the former’s acerbic criticisms of the latter, "in this as in most things Scamozzi errs", have been much analysed by architectural historians. Nonetheless, Giles Worsley notes the large number of books and drawings by Scamozzi Jones held in his library, and their considerable influence on his work.[35]
  8. ^ A design by Burlington for a Kitchen block at Tottenham draws inspiration very directly from a Palladio design for the Villa Valmarana (Vigardolo).[37]
  9. ^ Rossi built the new façade for the rebuilt Sant'Eustachio, known in Venice as San Stae, 1709, which was among the most sober in a competition that was commemorated with engravings of the submitted designs, and he rebuilt Ca' Corner della Regina, 1724–1727.[43]
  10. ^ His façade of San Vidal is a faithful restatement of Palladio's San Francesco della Vigna and his masterwork is Tolentini, Venice (1706–1714).[43]
  11. ^ Inigo Jones's annotated copy of I quattro libri dell'architettura is held in the library of Worcester College, Oxford. Summerson described it as "a document fraught with great significance for English architecture."[46]
  12. ^ Jones travelled as far south as Naples where he closely studied the church of San Paolo Maggiore. Palladio had written about, and illustrated, this church which, before severe damage in an earthquake in 1688, "looked like the Roman temple it essentially was".[47]
  13. ^ Modern scholarship suggests that Campbell's talents as a copyist and self-publicist exceeded his architectural ability. John Harris, in his 1995 catalogue The Palladian Revival, accuses Campbell of "outrageous plagiari[sm]".[66]
  14. ^ Howard Colvin writes; "It was a book with a message, the superiority of ‘antique simplicity’ over the ‘affected and licentious’ forms of the Baroque".[68]
  15. ^ In 1718 William Benson manoeuvred Sir Christopher Wren out of his post of Surveyor of the King's Works, but held the job for less than a year; John Summerson notes, "Benson proved his incompetence with surprising promptitude and resigned in 1719".[73]
  16. ^ James Stevens Curl considers Burlington, "one of the most potent influences on the development of English architecture in its entire history".[76]
  17. ^ At Holkham, the four wings contain a chapel, a kitchen, a guest wing and a private family wing.[82]
  18. ^ The architectural historian Mark Girouard, in his work, Life In The English Country House, notes that the arrangement developed by Palladio with the wings of the villa containing farm buildings was never followed in England. Although there are examples in Ireland and in North America, such "a close connection between house and farm was entirely at variance with the English tradition".[89]
  19. ^ Sir Aston Webb drew inspiration for his Buckingham Palace east frontage from the south front of Lyme Park, Cheshire by Giacomo Leoni (1686–1746).[92][93]
  20. ^ So much of Dublin was built in the 18th century that it set a Georgian stamp on the city; however, due to poor planning and poverty, Dublin was until recently one of the few cities where fine 18th-century housing could be seen in ruinous condition.[100]
  21. ^ Kilboy House, in Dolla, County Tipperary is a Palladian mansion that first burnt down in 1922. The reconstructed house was again destroyed by fire in 2005[114] and was rebuilt in a Palladian style by Quinlan Terry and his son Francis[115] for Tony Ryan, the founder of Ryanair.[116] Country Life described Kilboy as "the greatest new house in Europe".[117][118]
  22. ^ A brief survey is Robert Tavernor, "Anglo-Palladianism and the birth of a new nation" in Palladio and Palladianism, (1991), pp.181–209; Walter Muir Whitehill, Palladio in America, (1978) is still the standard work.
  23. ^ An exhibition, Jefferson and Palladio: Constructing a New World was held at the Palladio Museum in Vicenza in 2015–2016. The exhibition was dedicated to Mario Valmarana, Professor of Architecture at the University of Virginia and a descendant of the family who commissioned Palladio to design the Villa Valmarana.[128][129]
  24. ^ In a letter to James Oldham, dated Christmas Eve 1804, Jefferson wrote, "there never was a Palladio here even in private hands until I brought one. I send you my portable edition. It contains only the 1st book on the orders, which is the essential part".[133]
  25. ^ Specifically, both doors seem to have been derived from plates XXV and XXVI of Palladio Londinensis, a builder's guide first published in London in 1734, the year when the doorways may have been installed.[140]
  26. ^ In Contrasts, his trumpet blast against Classical architectural forms, Pugin quotes approvingly from Charles Forbes René de Montalembert; "modern Catholics have formed the types of their churches from the detestable models of pagan error, raising temples in imitation of the Parthenon and the Pantheon, representing the Eternal Father under the semblance of Jupiter, the blessed Virgin as a draped Venus, saints as amorous nymphs and angels in the form of Cupids."[160]
  27. ^ Examples include Peter Zumthor’s Secular Retreat in Devon, a "countryside villa in the tradition of Andrea Palladio",[167] and Julian Bicknell's Henbury Hall in Cheshire.[155]
  28. ^ The Palladian inspiration for modern British architects has not always been appreciated. In an article in Apollo entitled "The curse of Palladio", the critic Gavin Stamp critiqued Erith and Terry’s work as "photocopy-Palladian, classical details stuck onto dull boxes".[173]
  29. ^ The continuing Palladian influence in North America has also drawn criticism. The critic Stephen Bayley, in a review of the 2009 Palladio exhibition at the Royal Academy, wrote of "American realtors describ(ing) any dire Miami McMansion with a classical portico and the odd volute as Palladian."[174]

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Sources

External links

  • Center for Palladian Studies in America
  • Inigo Jones document collection at Worcester College, Oxford
  • (in English and Italian)
  • Thomas Jefferson's architecture
  • Article on Palladian architecture in colonial Singapore, published by the Department of Architecture and Urban Planning

palladian, architecture, european, architectural, style, derived, from, work, venetian, architect, andrea, palladio, 1508, 1580, what, today, recognised, evolved, from, concepts, symmetry, perspective, principles, formal, classical, architecture, from, ancient. Palladian architecture is a European architectural style derived from the work of the Venetian architect Andrea Palladio 1508 1580 What is today recognised as Palladian architecture evolved from his concepts of symmetry perspective and the principles of formal classical architecture from ancient Greek and Roman traditions In the 17th and 18th centuries Palladio s interpretation of this classical architecture developed into the style known as Palladianism A villa with a superimposed portico from Book IV of Palladio s I quattro libri dell architettura in an English translation published in London 1736 Plan for Palladio s Villa La Rotonda c 1565 features of the house were incorporated in numerous Palladian style houses throughout Europe over the following centuries Palladianism emerged in England in the early 17th century led by Inigo Jones whose Queen s House at Greenwich has been described as the first English Palladian building Its development faltered at the onset of the English Civil War After the Stuart Restoration the architectural landscape was dominated by the more flamboyant English Baroque Palladianism returned to fashion after a reaction against the Baroque in the early 18th century fuelled by the publication of a number of architectural books including Palladio s own I quattro libri dell architettura The Four Books of Architecture and Colen Campbell s Vitruvius Britannicus Campbell s book included illustrations of Wanstead House a building he designed on the outskirts of London and one of the largest and most influential of the early neo Palladian houses The movement s resurgence was championed by Richard Boyle 3rd Earl of Burlington whose buildings for himself such as Chiswick House and Burlington House became celebrated Burlington sponsored the career of the artist architect and landscaper William Kent and their joint creation Holkham Hall in Norfolk has been described as the most splendid Palladian house in England 1 By the middle of the century Palladianism had become almost the national architectural style epitomised by Kent s Horse Guards at the centre of the nation s capital The Palladian style was also widely used throughout Europe often in response to English influences In Prussia the critic and courtier Francesco Algarotti corresponded with Burlington about his efforts to persuade Frederick the Great of the merits of the style while Knobelsdorff s opera house in Berlin on the Unter den Linden begun in 1741 was based on Campbell s Wanstead House Later in the century when the style was losing favour in Europe Palladianism had a surge in popularity throughout the British colonies in North America Thomas Jefferson sought out Palladian examples which themselves drew on buildings from the time of the Roman Republic to develop a new architectural style for the American Republic Examples include the Hammond Harwood House in Maryland and Jefferson s own house Monticello in Virginia The Palladian style was also adopted in other British colonies including those in the Indian subcontinent In the 19th century Palladianism was overtaken in popularity by Neoclassical architecture in both Europe and in North America By the middle of that century both were challenged and then superseded by the Gothic Revival in the English speaking world whose champions such as Augustus Pugin remembering the origins of Palladianism in ancient temples deemed the style too pagan for true Christian worship In the 20th and 21st centuries Palladianism has continued to evolve as an architectural style its pediments symmetry and proportions are evident in the design of many modern buildings while its inspirer is regularly cited as having been among the world s most influential architects Contents 1 Palladio s architecture 2 Venetian and Palladian windows 3 Early Palladianism 4 Neo Palladianism 4 1 English Palladian architecture 4 2 Irish Palladian architecture 4 3 North American Palladian architecture 4 4 Palladianism elsewhere 5 Legacy 6 See also 7 Notes references and sources 7 1 Notes 7 2 References 7 3 Sources 8 External linksPalladio s architecture Edit True Palladianism at the Villa Godi 1537 1542 from Palladio s I quattro libri dell architettura The flanking pavilions are agricultural buildings not part of the villa In the 18th century the connecting colonnades evolved as enfilades of rooms while the pavilions often became self contained wings or blocks a common feature of 18th century Palladianism Andrea Palladio was born in Padua in 1508 the son of a stonemason 2 He was inspired by Roman buildings the writings of Vitruvius 80 BC and his immediate predecessors Donato Bramante and Raphael Palladio aspired to an architectural style that used symmetry and proportion to emulate the grandeur of classical buildings 3 His surviving buildings are in Venice Veneto region and Vicenza 4 and include villas and churches such as the Basilica del Redentore in Venice 5 Palladio s architectural treatises follow the approach defined by Vitruvius and his 15th century disciple Leon Battista Alberti who adhered to principles of classical Roman architecture based on mathematical proportions rather than the ornamental style of the Renaissance 6 Palladio recorded and publicised his work in the 1570 four volume illustrated study I quattro libri dell architettura The Four Books of Architecture 7 Palladio s villas are designed to fit with their setting 8 If on a hill such as Villa Almerico Capra Valmarana Villa Capra or La Rotonda facades were of equal value so that occupants could enjoy views in all directions 9 Porticos were built on all sides to enable the residents to appreciate the countryside while remaining protected from the sun 10 n 1 Palladio sometimes used a loggia as an alternative to the portico This is most simply described as a recessed portico or an internal single storey room with pierced walls that are open to the elements Occasionally a loggia would be placed at second floor level over the top of another loggia creating what was known as a double loggia 12 Loggias were sometimes given significance in a facade by being surmounted by a pediment Villa Godi s focal point is a loggia rather than a portico with loggias terminating each end of the main building 13 Villa Capra La Rotonda begun c 1565 one of Palladio s most influential designs Palladio would often model his villa elevations on Roman temple facades The temple influence often in a cruciform design later became a trademark of his work 14 n 2 Palladian villas are usually built with three floors a rusticated basement or ground floor containing the service and minor rooms above this the piano nobile noble level accessed through a portico reached by a flight of external steps containing the principal reception and bedrooms and lastly a low mezzanine floor with secondary bedrooms and accommodation The proportions of each room for example height and width within the villa were calculated on simple mathematical ratios like 3 4 and 4 5 The arrangement of the different rooms within the house and the external facades were similarly determined 15 n 3 Earlier architects had used these formulas for balancing a single symmetrical facade however Palladio s designs related to the entire structure 13 Palladio set out his views in I quattro libri dell architettura beauty will result from the form and correspondence of the whole with respect to the several parts of the parts with regard to each other and of these again to the whole that the structure may appear an entire and complete body wherein each member agrees with the other and all necessary to compose what you intend to form 17 Palladio considered the dual purpose of his villas as the centres of farming estates and weekend retreats 18 These symmetrical temple like houses often have equally symmetrical but low wings sweeping away from them to accommodate horses farm animals and agricultural stores 19 The wings sometimes detached and connected to the villa by colonnades were designed not only to be functional but also to complement and accentuate the villa Palladio did not intend them to be part of the main house but the development of the wings to become integral parts of the main building undertaken by Palladio s followers in the 18th century became one of the defining characteristics of Palladianism 20 Venetian and Palladian windows Edit Basilica Palladiana Vicenza from 1546 loggia with Palladian windows Palladian Serlian n 4 or Venetian windows are a trademark of Palladio s early career There are two different versions of the motif the simpler one is called a Venetian window and the more elaborate a Palladian window or Palladian motif although this distinction is not always observed 22 The Venetian window has three parts a central high round arched opening and two smaller rectangular openings to the sides The side windows are topped by lintels and supported by columns 23 This is derived from the ancient Roman triumphal arch and was first used outside Venice by Donato Bramante and later mentioned by Sebastiano Serlio 1475 1554 in his seven volume architectural book Tutte l opere d architettura et prospetiva All the Works of Architecture and Perspective expounding the ideals of Vitruvius and Roman architecture 24 It can be used in series but is often only used once in a facade as at New Wardour Castle 25 or once at each end as on the inner facade of Burlington House true Palladian windows 26 n 5 Palladio s elaboration of this normally used in a series places a larger or giant order in between each window and doubles the small columns supporting the side lintels placing the second column behind rather than beside the first This was introduced in the Biblioteca Marciana in Venice by Jacopo Sansovino 1537 and heavily adopted by Palladio in the Basilica Palladiana in Vicenza 28 where it is used on both storeys this feature was less often copied The openings in this elaboration are not strictly windows as they enclose a loggia Pilasters might replace columns as in other contexts Sir John Summerson suggests that the omission of the doubled columns may be allowed but the term Palladian motif should be confined to cases where the larger order is present 29 Claydon House begun 1757 the Venetian window in the central bay is surrounded by a unifying blind arch 30 Palladio used these elements extensively for example in very simple form in his entrance to Villa Forni Cerato 31 It is perhaps this extensive use of the motif in the Veneto that has given the window its alternative name of the Venetian window Whatever the name or the origin this form of window has become one of the most enduring features of Palladio s work seen in the later architectural styles evolved from Palladianism 32 n 6 According to James Lees Milne its first appearance in Britain was in the remodelled wings of Burlington House London where the immediate source was in the English court architect Inigo Jones s designs for Whitehall Palace rather than drawn from Palladio himself Lees Milne describes the Burlington window as the earliest example of the revived Venetian window in England 34 A variant in which the motif is enclosed within a relieving blind arch that unifies the motif is not Palladian though Richard Boyle seems to have assumed it was so in using a drawing in his possession showing three such features in a plain wall Modern scholarship attributes the drawing to Vincenzo Scamozzi n 7 Burlington employed the motif in 1721 for an elevation of Tottenham Park in Savernake Forest for his brother in law Lord Bruce since remodelled 36 n 8 William Kent picked it up in his designs for the Houses of Parliament and it appears in his executed designs for the north front of Holkham Hall 38 Another example is Claydon House in Buckinghamshire the remaining fragment is one wing of what was intended to be one of two flanking wings to a vast Palladian house The scheme was never completed and parts of what was built have since been demolished 30 Early Palladianism Edit The Queen s House Greenwich begun 1616 Inigo Jones s masterpiece 39 During the 17th century many architects studying in Italy learned of Palladio s work and on returning home adopted his style leading to its widespread use across Europe and North America 40 41 Isolated forms of Palladianism throughout the world were brought about in this way although the style did not reach the zenith of its popularity until the 18th century 42 An early reaction to the excesses of Baroque architecture in Venice manifested itself as a return to Palladian principles The earliest neo Palladians there were the exact contemporaries Domenico Rossi 1657 1737 n 9 and Andrea Tirali 1657 1737 n 10 Their biographer Tommaso Temanza proved to be the movement s most able proponent in his writings Palladio s visual inheritance became increasingly codified and moved towards neoclassicism 44 The most influential follower of Palladio was Inigo Jones who travelled throughout Italy with the art collector Earl of Arundel in 1613 1614 annotating his copy of Palladio s treatise 45 n 11 n 12 The Palladianism of Jones and his contemporaries and later followers was a style largely of facades with the mathematical formulae dictating layout not strictly applied A handful of country houses in England built between 1640 and 1680 are in this style 48 49 These follow the success of Jones s Palladian designs for the Queen s House at Greenwich 50 the first English Palladian house 51 and the Banqueting House at Whitehall the uncompleted royal palace in London of Charles I 52 Palladian designs advocated by Jones were too closely associated with the court of Charles I to survive the turmoil of the English Civil War 53 54 Following the Stuart restoration Jones s Palladianism was eclipsed by the Baroque designs of such architects as William Talman 55 Sir John Vanbrugh Nicholas Hawksmoor and Jones s pupil John Webb 56 57 Neo Palladianism EditEnglish Palladian architecture Edit Wanstead House 1722 among the first and largest of the Neo Palladian houses the image is from Colen Campbell s Vitruvius Britannicus The Baroque style proved highly popular in continental Europe but was often viewed with suspicion in England where it was considered theatrical exuberant and Catholic 58 59 It was superseded in Britain in the first quarter of the 18th century when four books highlighted the simplicity and purity of classical architecture 60 61 These were Vitruvius Britannicus The British Architect published by Colen Campbell in 1715 of which supplemental volumes appeared through the century 62 I quattro libri dell architettura The Four Books of Architecture by Palladio himself translated by Giacomo Leoni and published from 1715 onwards 62 De re aedificatoria On the Art of Building by Leon Battista Alberti translated by Giacomo Leoni and published in 1726 63 and The Designs of Inigo Jones with Some Additional Designs published by William Kent in two volumes in 1727 A further volume Some Designs of Mr Inigo Jones and Mr William Kent was published in 1744 by the architect John Vardy an associate of Kent 63 The most favoured among patrons was the four volume Vitruvius Britannicus by Campbell 64 65 n 13 The series contains architectural prints of British buildings inspired by the great architects from Vitruvius to Palladio at first mainly those of Inigo Jones but the later works contained drawings and plans by Campbell and other 18th century architects 67 n 14 These four books greatly contributed to Palladian architecture becoming established in 18th century Britain 69 Campbell and Kent became the most fashionable and sought after architects of the era Campbell had placed his 1715 designs for the colossal Wanstead House near to the front of Vitruvius Britannicus immediately following the engravings of buildings by Jones and Webb as an exemplar of what new architecture should be 70 On the strength of the book Campbell was chosen as the architect for Henry Hoare I s Stourhead house 71 Hoare s brother in law William Benson had designed Wilbury House the earliest 18th century Palladian house in Wiltshire which Campbell had also illustrated in Vitruvius Britannicus 72 n 15 Holkham Hall South front 1734 the four flanking wings are elevated in height and importance almost to the status of the central block At the forefront of the new school of design was the architect earl Richard Boyle 3rd Earl of Burlington according to Dan Cruikshank the man responsible for this curious elevation of Palladianism to the rank of a quasi religion 74 75 n 16 In 1729 he and Kent designed Chiswick House 77 78 This house was a reinterpretation of Palladio s Villa Capra but purified of 16th century elements and ornament 79 This severe lack of ornamentation was to be a feature of English Palladianism 80 In 1734 Kent and Burlington designed Holkham Hall in Norfolk 81 82 James Stevens Curl considers it the most splendid Palladian house in England 1 The main block of the house followed Palladio s dictates but his low often detached wings of farm buildings were elevated in significance Kent attached them to the design banished the farm animals and elevated the wings to almost the same importance as the house itself 83 It was the development of the flanking wings that was to cause English Palladianism to evolve from being a pastiche of Palladio s original work Wings were frequently adorned with porticos and pediments often resembling as at the much later Kedleston Hall small country houses in their own right 84 n 17 Woburn Abbey 1746 designed by Burlington s student Henry Flitcroft and showing further development of the wings Architectural styles evolve and change to suit the requirements of each individual client When in 1746 the Duke of Bedford decided to rebuild Woburn Abbey he chose the fashionable Palladian style and selected the architect Henry Flitcroft a protege of Burlington 85 86 Flitcroft s designs while Palladian in nature had to comply with the Duke s determination that the plan and footprint of the earlier house originally a Cistercian monastery be retained 87 The central block is small has only three bays while the temple like portico is merely suggested and is closed Two great flanking wings containing a vast suite of state rooms 88 replace the walls or colonnades which should have connected to the farm buildings n 18 the farm buildings terminating the structure are elevated in height to match the central block and given Palladian windows to ensure they are seen as of Palladian design 90 This development of the style was to be repeated in many houses and town halls in Britain over one hundred years Often the terminating blocks would have blind porticos and pilasters themselves competing for attention with or complementing the central block This was all very far removed from the designs of Palladio two hundred years earlier Falling from favour during the Victorian era the approach was revived by Sir Aston Webb for his refacing of Buckingham Palace in 1913 91 n 19 The villa tradition continued throughout the late 18th century particularly in the suburbs around London Sir William Chambers built many examples such as Parkstead House 94 But the grander English Palladian houses were no longer the small but exquisite weekend retreats that their Italian counterparts were intended as They had become power houses in Sir John Summerson s words the symbolic centres of the triumph and dominance of the Whig Oligarchy who ruled Britain unchallenged for some fifty years after the death of Queen Anne 95 96 Summerson thought Kent s Horse Guards on Whitehall epitomised the establishment of Palladianism as the official style of Great Britain 63 As the style peaked thoughts of mathematical proportion were swept away Rather than square houses with supporting wings these buildings had the length of the facade as their major consideration long houses often only one room deep were deliberately deceitful in giving a false impression of size 97 Irish Palladian architecture Edit Castletown House 1722 an Irish Palladian house where the wings flank but are separate from the house and are joined by colonnades closely following Palladio s approach During the Palladian revival period in Ireland even modest mansions were cast in a neo Palladian mould Irish Palladian architecture subtly differs from the England style While adhering as in other countries to the basic ideals of Palladio it is often truer to them 98 In Ireland Palladianism became political both the original and the present Irish parliaments in Dublin occupy Palladian buildings 99 n 20 The Irish architect Sir Edward Lovett Pearce 1699 1733 became a leading advocate 101 He was a cousin of Sir John Vanbrugh and originally one of his pupils He rejected the Baroque style and spent three years studying architecture in France and Italy before returning to Ireland His most important Palladian work is the former Irish Houses of Parliament in Dublin 102 Christine Casey in her 2005 volume Dublin in the Pevsner Buildings of Ireland series considers the building arguably the most accomplished public set piece of the Palladian style in Britain 103 Pearce was a prolific architect who went on to design the southern facade of Drumcondra House in 1725 104 and Summerhill House in 1731 105 which was completed after his death by Richard Cassels 106 Pearce also oversaw the building of Castletown House near Dublin designed by the Italian architect Alessandro Galilei 1691 1737 98 It is perhaps the only Palladian house in Ireland built with Palladio s mathematical ratios and one of a number of Irish mansions which inspired the design of the White House in Washington D C 107 Other examples include Russborough designed by Richard Cassels 108 who also designed the Palladian Rotunda Hospital in Dublin and Florence Court in County Fermanagh 97 Irish Palladian country houses often feature robust Rococo plasterwork an Irish specialty which was frequently executed by the Lafranchini brothers and far more flamboyant than the interiors of their contemporaries in England 109 In the 20th century during and following the Irish War of Independence and the subsequent civil war large numbers of Irish country houses including some fine Palladian examples such as Woodstock House 110 were abandoned to ruin or destroyed 111 112 113 n 21 North American Palladian architecture Edit Hammond Harwood House 1774 modelled after the Villa Pisani from I quattro libri dell architettura Palladio s influence in North America is evident almost from its first architect designed buildings n 22 The Irish philosopher George Berkeley who may be America s first recorded Palladian bought a large farmhouse in Middletown Rhode Island in the late 1720s and added a Palladian doorcase derived from Kent s Designs of Inigo Jones 1727 which he may have brought with him from London 119 Palladio s work was included in the library of a thousand volumes amassed for Yale College 120 Peter Harrison s 1749 designs for the Redwood Library in Newport Rhode Island borrow directly from Palladio s I quattro libri dell architettura while his plan for the Newport Brick Market conceived a decade later is also Palladian 121 Two colonial period houses that can be definitively attributed to designs from I quattro libri dell architettura are the Hammond Harwood House 1774 in Annapolis Maryland and Thomas Jefferson s first Monticello 1770 Hammond Harwood was designed by the architect William Buckland in 1773 1774 for the wealthy farmer Matthias Hammond of Anne Arundel County Maryland The design source is the Villa Pisani 122 and that for the first Monticello the Villa Cornaro at Piombino Dese 123 Both are taken from Book II Chapter XIV of I quattro libri dell architettura 124 Jefferson later made substantial alterations to Monticello known as the second Monticello 1802 1809 125 making the Hammond Harwood House the only remaining house in North America modelled directly on a Palladian design 126 127 Thomas Jefferson s Monticello 1772 Jefferson referred to I quattro libri dell architettura as his bible n 23 Although a statesman his passion was architecture 130 and he developed an intense appreciation of Palladio s architectural concepts his designs for the James Barbour Barboursville estate the Virginia State Capitol and the University of Virginia campus were all based on illustrations from Palladio s book 131 132 n 24 Realising the political significance of ancient Roman architecture to the fledgling American Republic Jefferson designed his civic buildings such as The Rotunda 134 in the Palladian style echoing in his buildings for the new republic examples from the old 135 In Virginia and Carolina the Palladian style is found in numerous plantation houses such as Stratford Hall 136 Westover Plantation 137 and Drayton Hall 138 Westover s north and south entrances made of imported English Portland stone were patterned after a plate in William Salmon s Palladio Londinensis 1734 139 n 25 The distinctive feature of Drayton Hall its two storey portico was derived from Palladio 141 as was Mount Airy in Richmond County Virginia built in 1758 1762 142 A particular feature of American Palladianism was the re emergence of the great portico which as in Italy fulfilled the need of protection from the sun the portico in various forms and size became a dominant feature of American colonial architecture In the north European countries the portico had become a mere symbol often closed or merely hinted at in the design by pilasters and sometimes in very late examples of English Palladianism adapted to become a porte cochere in America the Palladian portico regained its full glory 143 The Rotunda University of Virginia 1822 1826 The White House in Washington D C was inspired by Irish Palladianism 107 Its architect James Hoban who built the executive mansion between 1792 and 1800 was born in Callan County Kilkenny in 1762 the son of tenant farmers on the estate of Desart Court a Palladian House designed by Pearce 144 He studied architecture in Dublin where Leinster House built c 1747 was one of the finest Palladian buildings of the time 107 Both Cassel s Leinster House and James Wyatt s Castle Coole have been cited as Hoban s inspirations for the White House but the more neoclassical design of that building particularly of the South facade which closely resembles Wyatt s 1790 design for Castle Coole suggests that Coole is perhaps the more direct progenitor The architectural historian Gervase Jackson Stops describes Castle Coole as a culmination of the Palladian traditions yet strictly neoclassical in its chaste ornament and noble austerity 145 while Alistair Rowan in his 1979 volume North West Ulster of the Buildings of Ireland series suggests that at Coole Wyatt designed a building more massy more masculine and more totally liberated from Palladian practice than anything he had done before 146 Because of its later development Palladian architecture in Canada is rarer In her 1984 study Palladian Style in Canadian Architecture Nathalie Clerk notes its particular impact on public architecture as opposed to the private houses in the United States 147 One example of historical note is the Nova Scotia Legislature building completed in 1819 148 Another example is Government House in St John s Newfoundland 149 Palladianism elsewhere Edit Berlin Opera House 1743 The rise of neo Palladianism in England contributed to its adoption in Prussia Count Francesco Algarotti wrote to Lord Burlington to inform him that he was recommending to Frederick the Great the adoption in his own country of the architectural style Burlington had introduced in England 150 By 1741 Georg Wenzeslaus von Knobelsdorff had already begun construction of the Berlin Opera House on the Unter den Linden based on Campbell s Wanstead House 151 Palladianism was particularly adopted in areas under British colonial rule Examples can be seen in the Indian subcontinent the Raj Bhavan Kolkata formerly Government House was modelled on Kedleston Hall 152 while the architectural historian Pilar Maria Guerrieri identifies its influences in Lutyens Delhi 153 In South Africa Federico Freschi notes the Tuscan colonnades and Palladian windows of Herbert Baker s Union Buildings 154 Legacy Edit Henbury Hall Cheshire 1986 20th century Palladianism modelled on the Villa Capra 155 By the 1770s British architects such as Robert Adam and William Chambers were in high demand but were now drawing on a wide variety of classical sources including from ancient Greece so much so that their forms of architecture became defined as neoclassical rather than Palladian 156 157 In Europe the Palladian revival ended by the close of the 18th century In the 19th century proponents of the Gothic Revival such as Augustus Pugin remembering the origins of Palladianism in ancient temples considered it pagan and unsuited to Anglican and Anglo Catholic worship 158 159 n 26 In North America Palladianism lingered a little longer Thomas Jefferson s floor plans and elevations owe a great deal to Palladio s I quattro libri dell architettura 161 The term Palladian is often misused in modern discourse and tends to be used to describe buildings with any classical pretensions 162 163 There was a revival of a more serious Palladian approach in the 20th century when Colin Rowe an influential architectural theorist published his essay The Mathematics of the Ideal Villa 1947 in which he drew links between the compositional rules in Palladio s villas and Le Corbusier s villas at Poissy and Garches 164 165 Suzanne Walters article The Two Faces of Modernism suggests a continuing influence of Palladio s ideas on architects of the 20th century 166 n 27 In the 21st century Palladio s name regularly appears among the world s most influential architects 168 169 170 In England Raymond Erith 1904 1973 drew on Palladian inspirations and was followed in this by his pupil subsequently partner Quinlan Terry 171 Their work and that of others 155 led the architectural historian John Martin Robinson to suggest that the Quattro Libri continues as the fountainhead of at least one strand in the English country house tradition 172 n 28 n 29 See also Edit Architecture portalCity of Vicenza and the Palladian Villas of the Veneto New Classical architecture Giacomo Quarenghi Riviera del BrentaNotes references and sources EditNotes Edit Palladio s description of the Villa Capra includes the commentary One enjoys the most beautiful views on all sides and for this reason porticos have been built on all four sides 11 Giles Worsley in his study Inigo Jones and the European Classicist Tradition writes The portico is so strongly associated today with the country house and specifically with Palladio s villas it is easy to forget that outside of the Veneto it was principally associated with religious buildings until the late seventeenth century 10 Wundram and Pape describe Palladio s approach in the chapter on the Villa Capra in their 2004 study Palladio The Complete Buildings The proportions and principles become clear in the ground plan with positively mathematical precision The porticos take up half the width of the cubical central building The column entrance halls and flights of steps each correspond to half the depth of the core of the building In other words the sum of the four porticos and flights of steps covers the same area as the main building 16 After Sebastiano Serlio 1475 1554 an architect and illustrator whose L Architetturra was a model for Palladio s I quattro libri dell architettura 21 The architectural historian Timothy Mowl notes that the placing of the Venetian windows in each end bay was in fact something Palladio never did 27 A notable example in America is the Palladian window set into the north front of Mount Vernon George Washington s home in Virginia The centrepiece of the New Room and installed during Washington s second rebuilding the window draws heavily on a design from Batty Langley s City and Country Builder s and Workman s Treasury of Designs published in 1750 33 Inigo Jones met Scamozzi in Venice in 1613 1614 and the former s acerbic criticisms of the latter in this as in most things Scamozzi errs have been much analysed by architectural historians Nonetheless Giles Worsley notes the large number of books and drawings by Scamozzi Jones held in his library and their considerable influence on his work 35 A design by Burlington for a Kitchen block at Tottenham draws inspiration very directly from a Palladio design for the Villa Valmarana Vigardolo 37 Rossi built the new facade for the rebuilt Sant Eustachio known in Venice as San Stae 1709 which was among the most sober in a competition that was commemorated with engravings of the submitted designs and he rebuilt Ca Corner della Regina 1724 1727 43 His facade of San Vidal is a faithful restatement of Palladio s San Francesco della Vigna and his masterwork is Tolentini Venice 1706 1714 43 Inigo Jones s annotated copy of I quattro libri dell architettura is held in the library of Worcester College Oxford Summerson described it as a document fraught with great significance for English architecture 46 Jones travelled as far south as Naples where he closely studied the church of San Paolo Maggiore Palladio had written about and illustrated this church which before severe damage in an earthquake in 1688 looked like the Roman temple it essentially was 47 Modern scholarship suggests that Campbell s talents as a copyist and self publicist exceeded his architectural ability John Harris in his 1995 catalogue The Palladian Revival accuses Campbell of outrageous plagiari sm 66 Howard Colvin writes It was a book with a message the superiority of antique simplicity over the affected and licentious forms of the Baroque 68 In 1718 William Benson manoeuvred Sir Christopher Wren out of his post of Surveyor of the King s Works but held the job for less than a year John Summerson notes Benson proved his incompetence with surprising promptitude and resigned in 1719 73 James Stevens Curl considers Burlington one of the most potent influences on the development of English architecture in its entire history 76 At Holkham the four wings contain a chapel a kitchen a guest wing and a private family wing 82 The architectural historian Mark Girouard in his work Life In The English Country House notes that the arrangement developed by Palladio with the wings of the villa containing farm buildings was never followed in England Although there are examples in Ireland and in North America such a close connection between house and farm was entirely at variance with the English tradition 89 Sir Aston Webb drew inspiration for his Buckingham Palace east frontage from the south front of Lyme Park Cheshire by Giacomo Leoni 1686 1746 92 93 So much of Dublin was built in the 18th century that it set a Georgian stamp on the city however due to poor planning and poverty Dublin was until recently one of the few cities where fine 18th century housing could be seen in ruinous condition 100 Kilboy House in Dolla County Tipperary is a Palladian mansion that first burnt down in 1922 The reconstructed house was again destroyed by fire in 2005 114 and was rebuilt in a Palladian style by Quinlan Terry and his son Francis 115 for Tony Ryan the founder of Ryanair 116 Country Life described Kilboy as the greatest new house in Europe 117 118 A brief survey is Robert Tavernor Anglo Palladianism and the birth of a new nation in Palladio and Palladianism 1991 pp 181 209 Walter Muir Whitehill Palladio in America 1978 is still the standard work An exhibition Jefferson and Palladio Constructing a New World was held at the Palladio Museum in Vicenza in 2015 2016 The exhibition was dedicated to Mario Valmarana Professor of Architecture at the University of Virginia and a descendant of the family who commissioned Palladio to design the Villa Valmarana 128 129 In a letter to James Oldham dated Christmas Eve 1804 Jefferson wrote there never was a Palladio here even in private hands until I brought one I send you my portable edition It contains only the 1st book on the orders which is the essential part 133 Specifically both doors seem to have been derived from plates XXV and XXVI of Palladio Londinensis a builder s guide first published in London in 1734 the year when the doorways may have been installed 140 In Contrasts his trumpet blast against Classical architectural forms Pugin quotes approvingly from Charles Forbes Rene de Montalembert modern Catholics have formed the types of their churches from the detestable models of pagan error raising temples in imitation of the Parthenon and the Pantheon representing the Eternal Father under the semblance of Jupiter the blessed Virgin as a draped Venus saints as amorous nymphs and angels in the form of Cupids 160 Examples include Peter Zumthor s Secular Retreat in Devon a countryside villa in the tradition of Andrea Palladio 167 and Julian Bicknell s Henbury Hall in Cheshire 155 The Palladian inspiration for modern British architects has not always been appreciated In an article in Apollo entitled The curse of Palladio the critic Gavin Stamp critiqued Erith and Terry s work as photocopy Palladian classical details stuck onto dull boxes 173 The continuing Palladian influence in North America has also drawn criticism The critic Stephen Bayley in a review of the 2009 Palladio exhibition at the Royal Academy wrote of American realtors describ ing any dire Miami McMansion with a classical portico and the odd volute as Palladian 174 References Edit a b Curl 2016 p 409 Tavernor 1991 p 18 Curl 2016 p 549 City of Vincenza and the Palladian villas of the Veneto UNESCO Retrieved 19 June 2022 Wundram amp Pape 2004 p 156 Wittkower 1988 p 31 Curl 2016 p 551 Wundram amp Pape 2004 p 240 Wundram amp Pape 2004 p 186 a b Worsley 2007 p 129 Kruft 1994 p 90 Palazzo Chiericati Palladio Museum Retrieved 2 July 2022 a b Copplestone 1963 p 251 Tavernor 1991 p 77 Wassell Stephen R 19 January 2004 The Mathematics of Palladio s Villas PDF Nexus Network Journal doi 10 1007 s00004 998 0011 3 S2CID 119876036 Retrieved 2 July 2022 Wundram amp Pape 2004 p 194 Matuke Samantha 12 May 2016 Mathematical Beauty in Renaissance Architecture PDF Renaissance Architecture Retrieved 16 July 2022 Kerley Paul 10 September 2015 Palladio The architect who inspired our love of columns BBC News Retrieved 2 July 2022 O Brien amp Guinness 1993 p 52 Copplestone 1963 pp 251 252 Curl 2016 p 696 Seven Palladian windows RIBA Journal 7 September 2014 Retrieved 2 July 2022 Summerson 1981 p 134 Wittkower 1974 p 156 Wardour Castle National Heritage List for England Historic England Retrieved 19 June 2022 Royal Academy including Burlington House and Galleries and Royal Academy Schools Buildings National Heritage List for England Historic England Retrieved 19 June 2022 Mowl 2006 p 83 Summerson 1981 pp 129 130 Summerson 1981 p 130 a b Claydon House National Heritage List for England Historic England Retrieved 2 July 2022 Wundram amp Pape 2004 pp 27 30 Constant 1993 p 42 Brandt Lydia Mattice Palladian Window Mount Vernon Estate Retrieved 31 July 2022 Lees Milne 1986 p 100 Worsley 2007 p 99 Bold 1988 pp 140 144 Harris 1995 pp 88 89 Lees Milne 1986 p 133 Queen s House Royal Museums Greenwich Retrieved 11 July 2022 Ackerman 1991 p 80 City of Vicenza and the Palladian Villas of the Veneto UNESCO Retrieved 26 June 2022 Copplestone 1963 p 252 a b Howard amp Quill 2002 p 238 Tavernor 1991 p 112 Pevsner 1960 p 516 Summerson 1953 p 66 Chaney 2006 p 168 Bold 1988 p 25 Bold 1988 p 3 Whinney 1970 pp 33 35 Designing the Queen s House Royal Museums Greenwich Retrieved 4 July 2022 Copplestone 1963 p 280 Bold 1988 p 5 Whyte William What is Palladianism National Trust Retrieved 25 June 2022 Colvin 1978 p 803 Copplestone 1963 p 281 Introduction to Georgian Architecture The Georgian Group Retrieved 26 June 2022 Curl 2016 p 63 Jenkins Simon 10 September 2011 English baroque architecture seventy years of excess The Guardian Retrieved 2 July 2022 Summerson 1953 pp 295 297 Cruikshank 1985 pp 6 7 a b Summerson 1953 p 188 a b c Summerson 1953 p 208 Summerson 1953 pp 297 308 Curl 2016 p 140 Harris 1995 p 15 Palladianism an introduction Victoria and Albert Museum Retrieved 26 June 2022 Colvin 1978 p 182 Wainright Oliver 11 September 2015 Why Palladio is the world s favourite 16th century architect The Guardian Retrieved 2 July 2022 Vitruvius Britannicus or The British Architect Volume I Victoria and Albert Museum Retrieved 19 July 2022 Stourhead House National Heritage List for England Historic England Retrieved 25 June 2022 Orbach Pevsner amp Cherry 2021 p 784 Summerson 1953 p 170 Cruikshank 1985 p 8 Summerson 1953 pp 308 309 Curl 2016 p 128 History of Chiswick House and Gardens English Heritage Retrieved 19 June 2022 Summerson 1953 pp 309 313 Yarwood 1970 p 104 Palladianism An Introduction Victoria and Albert Museum Retrieved 2 July 2022 Bold 1988 p 141 a b Holkham Hall National Heritage List for England Historic England Retrieved 25 June 2022 Summerson 1953 p 194 Kedleston Hall National Heritage List for England Historic England Retrieved 25 June 2022 Woburn Abbey Official list entry National Heritage List for England Historic England Retrieved 25 June 2022 Henry Flitcroft Burlington Harry Twickenham Museum Retrieved 10 July 2022 O Brien amp Pevsner 2014 p 331 Jenkins 2003 pp 5 6 Girouard 1980 p 151 O Brien amp Pevsner 2014 p 332 Sutcliffe 2006 p 94 Lyme Park Cheshire Royal Collection Trust Retrieved 11 July 2022 Lyme Park Lyme Hall DiCamillo Retrieved 11 July 2022 Worsley 1996 p 82 Ruhl 2011 p 2 Spens Michael 14 February 2009 Andrea Palladio and the New Spirit in Architecture Studio International Foundation Retrieved 2 July 2022 a b Guinness amp Sadler 1976 p 70 a b Guinness amp Sadler 1976 p 55 Palladian style 1720 1770 Dublin Civic Trust 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Retrieved 23 July 2022 Kilboy House Francis Terry and Associates Retrieved 23 July 2022 Gleeson Peter 6 April 2006 Ryans to rebuild 18th century mansion Irish Independent Retrieved 23 July 2022 Stamp Agnes 7 September 2016 Contents Country Life Retrieved 24 July 2022 Kilboy House Garland Consultants Retrieved 23 July 2022 Gaustad 1979 p 70 Gaustad 1979 p 86 Building America The Center for Palladian Studies in America Inc 2009 Archived from the original on 23 December 2009 Retrieved 2 July 2022 Palladio and English American Palladianism The Center for Palladian Studies in America Inc 2009 Archived from the original on 23 October 2009 Retrieved 2 July 2022 Hawthorne Christopher 30 November 2008 A very fine Italian House Los Angeles Times Retrieved 19 June 2022 Benson Sarah B Hammond Harwood House Architectural Tour PDF Hammond Harwood House Museum p 7 Retrieved 19 June 2022 Monticello House and Garden FAQs Monticello org Retrieved 3 July 2022 Hammond Harwood House Society of Architectural Historians 17 July 2018 Retrieved 16 July 2022 The Palladian Connection Hammond Harwood House Retrieved 2 December 2011 Jefferson and Palladio Constructing a New World Palladio Museum Retrieved 26 June 2022 Villa Valmarana Lisiera Royal Institute of British Architects Retrieved 26 June 2022 Guinness amp Sadler 1976 pp 139 141 De Witt amp Piper 2019 p 1 Thomas Jefferson s Library The architecture of A Palladio Library of Congress Retrieved 26 June 2022 Extract from Thomas Jefferson to James Oldham Monticello org 24 December 1804 Retrieved 2 July 2022 Farber amp Reed 1980 p 107 Tavernor 1991 p 188 Guinness amp Sadler 1976 p 121 Guinness amp Sadler 1976 p 127 Guinness amp Sadler 1976 p 84 Severens 1981 p 37 Morrison 1952 p 340 Severens 1981 p 38 Guinness amp Sadler 1976 pp 107 111 Loth Calder 10 August 2010 Palladio and his legacy a transatlantic journey National Building Museum Retrieved 2 July 2022 Co Kilkenney Desart Court Dictionary of Irish Architects Retrieved 23 July 2022 Jackson Stops 1990 p 106 Rowan 1979 p 176 Clerk 1984 p 5 Province House National Historic Site of Canada Canadian Register of Historic Places Retrieved 19 June 2022 Government House National Historic Site of Canada Canadian Register of Historic Places Retrieved 19 June 2022 Lees Milne 1986 p 120 Weekes Ray The Architecture of Wansted House PDF Retrieved 20 June 2022 Metcalf 1989 p 12 Guerrieri 2021 pp 4 7 Freschi 2017 p 65 a b c Brittain Catlin Timothy 19 December 2019 When Palladio came to Cheshire in the 1980s Apollo Retrieved 2 July 2022 Curl 2016 pp 6 7 Curl 2016 p 161 Frampton 2001 p 36 Georgians Architecture English Heritage Retrieved 10 July 2022 Charlesworth 2002 p 112 Curl 2016 pp 393 394 Lofgren Mike 17 January 2022 The growing blight of infill McMansions Washington Monthly Retrieved 2 July 2022 Bayley Stephen 1 February 2009 Endlessly copied but never bettered The Guardian Retrieved 2 July 2022 Rowe Colin 31 March 1947 The Mathematics of the Ideal Villa Palladio and Le Corbusier compared Architectural Review Retrieved 26 June 2022 Curl 2016 p 658 Waters Suzanne The Two Faces of Modernism RIBA Retrieved 25 June 2022 Frearson Amy 29 October 2018 Peter Zumthor completes Devon countryside villa in the tradition of Andrea Palladio Dezeen Retrieved 2 July 2022 Glancy Jonathan 9 January 2009 The stonecutter who shook the world The Guardian Retrieved 11 July 2022 Andrea Palladio the man who made ancient modern George Washington University 1 October 2009 Retrieved 11 July 2022 Kerley Paul 10 September 2015 Palladio The architect who inspired our love of columns BBC News Retrieved 19 July 2022 Neville Flora 23 March 2017 Interview with Quinlan Terry Spears Retrieved 2 July 2022 Robinson 1983 p 173 Stamp Gavin November 2004 The curse of Palladio Apollo Retrieved 2 July 2022 Bayley Stephen 1 February 2009 Endlessly copied but never bettered The Observer Retrieved 23 July 2022 Sources Edit Ackerman James S 1991 Palladio Harmondsworth UK Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 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Architecture London Hamlyn OCLC 473368368 Cruikshank Dan 1985 A guide to Georgian buildings of Britain and Ireland London Weidenfeld and Nicolson with the National Trust and Irish Georgian Society ISBN 978 0 297 78610 8 Curl James Stevens 2016 Oxford Dictionary of Architecture Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 199 67499 2 De Witt Lloyd Corey Piper 2019 Thomas Jefferson Architect New Haven US Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 24620 9 Farber Jospeh C Reed Henry Hope 1980 Palladio s Architecture and Its Influence A Photographic Guide New York Dover Publications ISBN 978 0 486 23922 4 Frampton Kenneth 2001 Studies in Tectonic Culture Cambridge US MIT Press ISBN 978 0 262 06173 5 Freschi Federico 2017 Poetry in Pidgin Notes on the Persistence of Classicism in the Architecture of Johannesburg In Grant Parker ed South Africa Greece Rome Classical Confrontations Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 107 10081 7 Gaustad Edwin 1979 George Berkeley in America New Haven US Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 02394 7 Girouard Mark 1980 Life In The English Country House Harmondsworth UK Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 140 05406 4 Guerrieri Pilar Maria December 2021 Migrating architectures Palladio s legacy from Calcutta to New Delhi City Territory and Architecture 8 1 doi 10 1186 s40410 021 00135 0 S2CID 235307212 Retrieved 10 July 2022 Guinness Desmond Sadler Julius Trousdale 1976 The Palladian Style in England Ireland and America London Thames and Hudson ISBN 978 0 500 34067 7 Harris John 1995 The Palladian Revival Lord Burlington His Villa and Garden at Chiswick New Haven US and London Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 05983 0 Howard Deborah Quill Sarah 2002 The Architectural history of Venice New Haven US Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 09028 4 Jackson Stops Gervase 1990 The Country House in Perspective London Pavilion Books Ltd ISBN 978 1 851 45383 2 Jenkins Simon 2003 England s Thousand Best Houses London Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 713 99596 1 Kruft Hanno Walter 1994 A History of Architectural Theory From Vitruvius to the Present Princeton US Princeton Architectural Press ISBN 978 1 568 98010 2 Lees Milne James 1986 The Earls of Creation London Century Hutchinson ISBN 978 0 712 69464 3 MacDonnell Randal 2002 The Lost Houses of Ireland London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson ISBN 978 0 297 84301 6 Metcalf Thomas R 1989 An Imperial Vision Indian Architecture and Britain s Raj London Faber and Faber ISBN 978 0 571 15419 7 Morrison Hugh 1952 American s First Architecture From the First Colonial Settlements to the National Period New York Oxford University Press OCLC 1152916624 Mowl Timothy 2006 William Kent Architect Designer Opportunist London Jonathan Cape ISBN 978 0 224 07350 9 O Brien Charles Pevsner Nikolaus 2014 Bedfordshire Huntingdonshire and Peterborough The Buildings of England New Haven US and London Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 20821 4 O Brien Jacqueline Guinness Desmond 1993 Great Irish Houses and Castles London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson ISBN 978 0 297 83236 2 Orbach Julian Pevsner Nikolaus Cherry Bridget 2021 Wiltshire The Buildings of England New Haven US and London Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 25120 3 Pevsner Nikolaus 1960 An Outline of European Architecture Harmondsworth UK Penguin Books OCLC 154230727 Robinson John Martin 1983 The Latest Country Houses London The Bodley Head ISBN 978 0 370 30562 2 Rowan Alistair 1979 North West Ulster The Buildings of Ireland London Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 300 09667 5 Ruhl Carsten 2011 Palladianism From the Italian Villa to International Architecture Mainz Germany Institute of European History OCLC 1184498677 Severens Kenneth 1981 Southern Architecture 350 Years of Distinctive American Buildings New York E P Dutton ISBN 978 0 525 20692 7 Summerson John 1953 Architecture in Britain 1530 1830 Pelican History of Art Harmondsworth UK Penguin Books OCLC 1195758004 1981 The Classical Language of Architecture World of Art London Thames and Hudson ISBN 978 0 500 20177 0 Sutcliffe Anthony 2006 London An Architectural History New Haven US and London Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 11006 7 Tavernor Robert 1991 Palladio and Palladianism World of Art London Thames and Hudson ISBN 978 0 500 20242 5 Whinney Margaret 1970 Howard Colvin John Harris eds A Unknown Design for a Villa by Inigo Jones Vol The Country Seat Studies Presented to Sir John Summerson London Penguin Books OCLC 1160730033 Wittkower Rudolf 1974 Palladio and English Palladianism London Thames and Hudson OCLC 462688249 1988 1949 Architectural Principles in the Age of Humanism PDF London Academy Editions ISBN 978 0 471 97763 6 Worsley Giles 1996 The Villa and the Classical Country Houses In John Harris Michael Snodin eds Sir William Chambers Architect to George III New Haven US and London Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 06940 2 OCLC 750912646 2007 Inigo Jones and the European Classicist Tradition New Haven US and London Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 11729 5 Wundram Manfred Pape Thomas 2004 Palladio The Complete Buildings Koln Germany Taschen ISBN 978 3 822 83200 4 Yarwood Doreen 1970 Robert Adam New York Scribner OCLC 90417 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Palladian architecture Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Palladian Center for Palladian Studies in America Inigo Jones document collection at Worcester College Oxford International centre for the study of the architecture of Andrea Palladio CISA in English and Italian Thomas Jefferson s architecture Article on Palladian architecture in colonial Singapore published by the Department of Architecture and Urban Planning Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Palladian architecture amp oldid 1149868458, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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