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Petrine Baroque

Petrine Baroque (Russian: Петровское барокко) is a style of 17th and 18th century Baroque architecture and decoration favoured by Peter the Great and employed to design buildings in the newly founded Russian capital, Saint Petersburg, under this monarch and his immediate successors. [2]

The Saints Peter and Paul Cathedral by architect Dominico Trezzini exists as it was originally designed. It is regarded as the most notable example of the Petrine Baroque style of architecture.[1]

Different from contemporary Naryshkin Baroque, favoured in Moscow, the Petrine Baroque represented a dramatic departure from Byzantine traditions that had dominated Russian architecture for almost a millennium. Its chief practitioners - Domenico Trezzini, Andreas Schlüter, and Mikhail Zemtsov - drew inspiration from a rather modest Dutch, Danish, and Swedish architecture of the time. [3]

Notable examples edit

 
Kikin Hall (1714), an example of private residence dating from Peter I's reign.

Extant examples of the style in St Petersburg are the Peter and Paul Cathedral (Trezzini), the Twelve Colleges (Trezzini), the Kunstkamera (Mattarnovi), Kikin Hall (Schlüter) and Menshikov Palace (Giovanni Fontana). [citation needed]

The Petrine Baroque structures outside St. Petersburg are scarce; they include the Menshikov Tower in Moscow and the Kadriorg Palace in Tallinn [citation needed]

Architectural influences on Peter the Great edit

Peter the Great, also known as Peter I, served as the tsar of Russia from 1682–1725. He was the first Russian monarch to travel outside of Russia and this travel exposed him to the architecture of many other countries. His own library contained architectural books from the Netherlands, France, Germany and Italy. The buildings of these countries influenced Peter's taste in architecture as he set forward to build the new Russian capital of St. Petersburg. Peter had a very specific idea of what he wanted this new city to look like in terms of architectural style, and he took initiative in recruiting people who could help accomplish his vision and researching architectural styles. While in rule, Peter attempted to bring about change to the nation of Russia as quickly as possible and tried to incorporate western style and tradition into the everyday lives of his citizens. As part of this, Peter put regulations into effect, which mandated what cities should look like.[2]

Peter's original goal for St. Petersburg was to re-create the city of Amsterdam.[4] As the city began construction, Peter started making changes to the designs of the buildings, often altering the planned appearance of buildings once their construction had already started. These last minute alterations led to buildings not belonging to one particular architectural school.[5]

Naryshkin Baroque style edit

Peter was raised in Moscow, lived at the Grand Palace of Kremlin, and spent time at multiple royal estates outside of the city. His father died when he was four years old, so Peter had a fairly unsupervised youth to pursue his own passions. Peter developed his taste for architecture by looking at the buildings which surrounded him in his childhood, many of which were patronized by his family. These churches and houses which surrounded Moscow reflected European influence in their structure and decoration. The Moscow or Naryshkin Baroque style, named after Peter's maternal side of the family, was prominent in these buildings. Characteristic of the Naryshkin Baroque are large scale buildings and lack of wood amongst building materials.[6]

Dutch Baroque style edit

 
The Summer Palace

As Peter entered young adulthood and spent time travelling, his architectural taste began to favor the elements of Dutch architecture. Peter met with the Dutch architect Simon Schijnvoet (sometimes Schynvoet or Schynvaet) in 1697. Schijnvoet specialized in Dutch Baroque but also taught Peter about naval architecture. The first house in St. Petersburg that Peter designed utilized elements from this naval style which Schjinvoet taught him, including flat, painted log walls, wooden tile-like shingles, and windows made from small planes of glass. These elements of design were unlike the Russian styles seen up until this point.

The Russian history scholar James Cracraft suggests that the clearest example of Dutch architecture designed under Peter's rule was his Summer Palace in St. Petersburg which was referred to as "Monplaisir" or "Little Dutch House". In a 1724 letter to the architectural student Ivan Korobov, Peter discusses his preference for the ornamentation of Dutch Baroque. In this same letter, Peter conveys his disinterest for the architectural styles of the French and Italian due to its lack of adornment and use of stone rather than brick. Among Peter's papers, a note was found describing how he sent two Russian architecture students to Holland so that they could learn the Dutch Baroque style and come back to build churches and houses for St. Petersburg. In addition to having Russian students train abroad, Peter also hired Dutch architects to come and work on projects in Russia.[7]

Other styles edit

While Peter preferred the Dutch Baroque style, he also sought out architectural inspiration from other countries. Despite his recorded dislike for the French and Italian Baroque architecture, Peter sent two architectural students to Rome in 1723 to replace another two students working there. Scholars suggest that an equal amount of architectural students were sent to Holland and Italy during his reign and more Italian builders worked on projects for Peter in Russia than Dutch builders did. In the early years of St. Petersburg, the French served as prominent designers and decorators.[8]

Notable architects edit

Domenico Trezzini edit

 
The Twelve Colleges, Construction began by Trezzini in 1722

Domenico Trezzini was born in Italian-speaking region of Switzerland in 1670. The architects that surrounded him in his youth were responsible for the development of the Baroque style in southern Germany. Trezzini's architectural style has visible influences from this German Baroque style along with the northern style of Baroque architecture that he picked up during his time living in Copenhagen.[3] Trezzini was also influenced by the Lombard Baroque style of architecture which was popular in Northern Italy where he grew up during the 17th century.[9] From 1703 until his death in 1734, Trezzini lived in St. Petersburg during the rule of Peter the Great. Trezzini began many of the building projects that formed the basis of the city. Due to the many projects that Trezzini worked on, he was given the title of "Lieutenant-Colonel of Fortification and Architect" in 1710.[3]

Some of Trezzini's major additions to the city include: Peter the Great's Summer Palace, the Alexander Nevsky Lavra, the Twelve Colleges, and the Saints Peter and Paul Cathedral. Trezzini and his team designed the layout of the developing St. Petersburg including the streets of the anticipated city center of Vasilyevsky Island.[3] The layout of the city was arranged in a grid format with perpendicular streets and canals. Trezzini's design of the city did not follow the European ideal at the time because of its lack of compactness and grid organization rather than the traditional ringed layout.[10]

 
A fragment from Trezzini's 1720 design for the layout of St. Petersburg.
 
The Trezzini Monument in St. Petersburg

In 1714, Peter declared that all houses in St. Petersburg should be constructed after Trezzini's model home. Different versions of the home were created for different classes of citizens based on their rank. Peter classified all citizens into 14 different classes, all of which had different residential areas in Trezzini plan. The size of the citizen's home directly corresponded to their standing in this social ranking.[10] The lower classes were divided by their trades and the upper classes were divided by the amount of serfs that they controlled.[11] Several engravings of the model homes exist and while they are often accredited to Trezzini himself, his assistant Jean-Baptiste Alexandre Le Blond is responsible for creating them.[3] These plans dictated the ornamentation style of the homes and the materials that they would be built with belonging to each class of citizens. In the city center proper, these guidelines were adhered to strictly. The further from the city center, the more flexibility with the design of homes there was. Despite the effort put into maintaining a regulated city design, after Peter's death, the system that Trezzini designed fell to the wayside.[10] Scholars consider Peter I's comprehensive urban design to be one of his greatest legacies.[12]

In the design of his buildings, the Dutch Baroque style is visible in the types of ornamentation he preferred. For columns, Trezzini preferred squared pilasters as a decorative element and restricted their use to where they were structurally necessary or served a major purpose in the overall design. Trezzini also took inspiration from the work of Christopher Wren, whose work on the St. Paul's Cathedral appears in Trezzini's sketches.[9]

Trezzini established the St. Petersburg Chancellery of Construction and became its first director. This school was the first institution to offer formal training for architects in Russia. Among those who trained at the Chancellery was Mikhail Zemtsov who continued Trezzini's legacy.[13] Other architects whom Trezzini worked alongside during his life and continued the construction of his buildings after his death were Carlo Giuseppe and Pietro Antonio Trezzini.[9]

Examples of Trezzini's architectural contributions
 
The Summer Palace of Peter I by Dominico Trezzini
 
The Peter-Paul Church by Dominico Trezzini
 
One of the buildings from the Twelve Colleges by Dominico Trezzini
 
The Twelve Colleges by Dominico Trezzini

Giovanni Maria Fontana edit

 
The main building of the Grand Menshikovsky Palace in Oranienbaum designed by Giovanni Maria Fontana.

Mikhail Zemtsov edit

Examples of Zemtsov's architectural contributions
 
Kadriorg Palace by Mikhail Zemtsov

Francesco Bartolomeo Rastrelli edit

Examples of Rastrelli's architectural contributions
 
Grand Peterhof Palace by Francesco Bartolomeo Rastrelli
 
Grand Church of Peterhof Palace by Francesco Bartolomeo Rastrelli
 
Hermitage Pavilion by Francesco Bartolomeo Rastrelli

Georg Johann Mattarnovi edit

Examples of Mattarnovi's architectural contributions
 
The Kunstkamera museum by Georg Johann Mattarnovi

See also edit

Further reading edit

  • William Craft Brumfield. A History of Russian Architecture (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993) ISBN 978-0-521-40333-7 (Chapter Eight: "The Foundations of the Baroque in Saint Petersburg")

References edit

  1. ^ Cracraft, James (1988). "Revolution Embodied: The Building of St. Petersburg". The Petrine Revolution in Russian Architecture. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p. 156.
  2. ^ a b Shvidkovsky, Dmitry (2007). "Russian Imperial Baroque". Russian Architecture and the West. New Haven: Yale University Press. p. 183. ISBN 9780300109122.
  3. ^ a b c d e Cracraft, James (1988). "Revolution Embodied: The Building of St. Petersburg". Petrine Revolution in Russian Architecture. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p. 156.
  4. ^ Brumfield, William Craft (1983). "Saint Petersburg: The Imperial Design". Gold in Azure: One Thousand Years of Russian Architecture. Boston, Mass.: D.R. Godine. pp. 233–237.
  5. ^ Brumfield, William Craft (1983). "Saint Petersburg: The Imperial Design". Gold in Azure: One Thousand Years of Russian Architecture. Boston, Mass.: D.R. Godine. p. 238. ISBN 9780879234362.
  6. ^ Cracraft, James (1988). "Revolution Embodied: The Building of St. Petersburg". Petrine Revolution in Russian Architecture. University of Chicago Press. pp. 147–148.
  7. ^ Cracraft, James (1988). "Revolution Embodied: The Buildings of St. Petersburg". Petrine Revolution in Russian Architecture. University of Chicago Press. pp. 148–149.
  8. ^ Cracraft, James (1988). "Revolution Embodied: The Buildings of St. Petersburg". Petrine Revolution in Russian Architecture. University of Chicago Press. p. 150.
  9. ^ a b c Scvidkovskii, D O (2007). "Russian Imperial Baroque: Peter the Great's Foreign Architects: Dominico Trezzini". Russian Architecture and the West. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press. pp. 197–200.
  10. ^ a b c Shvidkovskii, D O (2007). "Russian Imperial Baroque". Russian Architecture and the West. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press. pp. 194–195.
  11. ^ Brumfield, William Craft (1983). "Saint Petersburg: The Imperial Design". Gold in Azure: One Thousand Years of Russian Architecture. Boston, Mass.: D.R. Godine. pp. 229. ISBN 9780879234362.
  12. ^ Brumfield, William Craft (1983). "Saint Petersburg: The Imperial Design". Gold in Azure: One Thousand Years of Russian Architecture. Boston, Mass.: D.R. Godine. pp. 237. ISBN 9780879234362.
  13. ^ Cracraft, James (1988). "Revolution Embodied: The Building of St. Petersburg". The Petrine Revolution in Russian Architecture. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press. p. 158.


petrine, baroque, russian, Петровское, барокко, style, 17th, 18th, century, baroque, architecture, decoration, favoured, peter, great, employed, design, buildings, newly, founded, russian, capital, saint, petersburg, under, this, monarch, immediate, successors. Petrine Baroque Russian Petrovskoe barokko is a style of 17th and 18th century Baroque architecture and decoration favoured by Peter the Great and employed to design buildings in the newly founded Russian capital Saint Petersburg under this monarch and his immediate successors 2 The Saints Peter and Paul Cathedral by architect Dominico Trezzini exists as it was originally designed It is regarded as the most notable example of the Petrine Baroque style of architecture 1 Different from contemporary Naryshkin Baroque favoured in Moscow the Petrine Baroque represented a dramatic departure from Byzantine traditions that had dominated Russian architecture for almost a millennium Its chief practitioners Domenico Trezzini Andreas Schluter and Mikhail Zemtsov drew inspiration from a rather modest Dutch Danish and Swedish architecture of the time 3 Contents 1 Notable examples 2 Architectural influences on Peter the Great 2 1 Naryshkin Baroque style 2 2 Dutch Baroque style 2 3 Other styles 3 Notable architects 3 1 Domenico Trezzini 3 2 Giovanni Maria Fontana 3 3 Mikhail Zemtsov 3 4 Francesco Bartolomeo Rastrelli 3 5 Georg Johann Mattarnovi 4 See also 5 Further reading 6 ReferencesNotable examples edit nbsp Kikin Hall 1714 an example of private residence dating from Peter I s reign Extant examples of the style in St Petersburg are the Peter and Paul Cathedral Trezzini the Twelve Colleges Trezzini the Kunstkamera Mattarnovi Kikin Hall Schluter and Menshikov Palace Giovanni Fontana citation needed The Petrine Baroque structures outside St Petersburg are scarce they include the Menshikov Tower in Moscow and the Kadriorg Palace in Tallinn citation needed Architectural influences on Peter the Great editPeter the Great also known as Peter I served as the tsar of Russia from 1682 1725 He was the first Russian monarch to travel outside of Russia and this travel exposed him to the architecture of many other countries His own library contained architectural books from the Netherlands France Germany and Italy The buildings of these countries influenced Peter s taste in architecture as he set forward to build the new Russian capital of St Petersburg Peter had a very specific idea of what he wanted this new city to look like in terms of architectural style and he took initiative in recruiting people who could help accomplish his vision and researching architectural styles While in rule Peter attempted to bring about change to the nation of Russia as quickly as possible and tried to incorporate western style and tradition into the everyday lives of his citizens As part of this Peter put regulations into effect which mandated what cities should look like 2 Peter s original goal for St Petersburg was to re create the city of Amsterdam 4 As the city began construction Peter started making changes to the designs of the buildings often altering the planned appearance of buildings once their construction had already started These last minute alterations led to buildings not belonging to one particular architectural school 5 Naryshkin Baroque style edit Main article Naryshkin Baroque Peter was raised in Moscow lived at the Grand Palace of Kremlin and spent time at multiple royal estates outside of the city His father died when he was four years old so Peter had a fairly unsupervised youth to pursue his own passions Peter developed his taste for architecture by looking at the buildings which surrounded him in his childhood many of which were patronized by his family These churches and houses which surrounded Moscow reflected European influence in their structure and decoration The Moscow or Naryshkin Baroque style named after Peter s maternal side of the family was prominent in these buildings Characteristic of the Naryshkin Baroque are large scale buildings and lack of wood amongst building materials 6 Dutch Baroque style edit Main article Dutch Baroque architecture nbsp The Summer Palace As Peter entered young adulthood and spent time travelling his architectural taste began to favor the elements of Dutch architecture Peter met with the Dutch architect Simon Schijnvoet sometimes Schynvoet or Schynvaet in 1697 Schijnvoet specialized in Dutch Baroque but also taught Peter about naval architecture The first house in St Petersburg that Peter designed utilized elements from this naval style which Schjinvoet taught him including flat painted log walls wooden tile like shingles and windows made from small planes of glass These elements of design were unlike the Russian styles seen up until this point The Russian history scholar James Cracraft suggests that the clearest example of Dutch architecture designed under Peter s rule was his Summer Palace in St Petersburg which was referred to as Monplaisir or Little Dutch House In a 1724 letter to the architectural student Ivan Korobov Peter discusses his preference for the ornamentation of Dutch Baroque In this same letter Peter conveys his disinterest for the architectural styles of the French and Italian due to its lack of adornment and use of stone rather than brick Among Peter s papers a note was found describing how he sent two Russian architecture students to Holland so that they could learn the Dutch Baroque style and come back to build churches and houses for St Petersburg In addition to having Russian students train abroad Peter also hired Dutch architects to come and work on projects in Russia 7 Other styles edit While Peter preferred the Dutch Baroque style he also sought out architectural inspiration from other countries Despite his recorded dislike for the French and Italian Baroque architecture Peter sent two architectural students to Rome in 1723 to replace another two students working there Scholars suggest that an equal amount of architectural students were sent to Holland and Italy during his reign and more Italian builders worked on projects for Peter in Russia than Dutch builders did In the early years of St Petersburg the French served as prominent designers and decorators 8 Notable architects editDomenico Trezzini edit nbsp The Twelve Colleges Construction began by Trezzini in 1722 Domenico Trezzini was born in Italian speaking region of Switzerland in 1670 The architects that surrounded him in his youth were responsible for the development of the Baroque style in southern Germany Trezzini s architectural style has visible influences from this German Baroque style along with the northern style of Baroque architecture that he picked up during his time living in Copenhagen 3 Trezzini was also influenced by the Lombard Baroque style of architecture which was popular in Northern Italy where he grew up during the 17th century 9 From 1703 until his death in 1734 Trezzini lived in St Petersburg during the rule of Peter the Great Trezzini began many of the building projects that formed the basis of the city Due to the many projects that Trezzini worked on he was given the title of Lieutenant Colonel of Fortification and Architect in 1710 3 Some of Trezzini s major additions to the city include Peter the Great s Summer Palace the Alexander Nevsky Lavra the Twelve Colleges and the Saints Peter and Paul Cathedral Trezzini and his team designed the layout of the developing St Petersburg including the streets of the anticipated city center of Vasilyevsky Island 3 The layout of the city was arranged in a grid format with perpendicular streets and canals Trezzini s design of the city did not follow the European ideal at the time because of its lack of compactness and grid organization rather than the traditional ringed layout 10 nbsp A fragment from Trezzini s 1720 design for the layout of St Petersburg nbsp The Trezzini Monument in St Petersburg In 1714 Peter declared that all houses in St Petersburg should be constructed after Trezzini s model home Different versions of the home were created for different classes of citizens based on their rank Peter classified all citizens into 14 different classes all of which had different residential areas in Trezzini plan The size of the citizen s home directly corresponded to their standing in this social ranking 10 The lower classes were divided by their trades and the upper classes were divided by the amount of serfs that they controlled 11 Several engravings of the model homes exist and while they are often accredited to Trezzini himself his assistant Jean Baptiste Alexandre Le Blond is responsible for creating them 3 These plans dictated the ornamentation style of the homes and the materials that they would be built with belonging to each class of citizens In the city center proper these guidelines were adhered to strictly The further from the city center the more flexibility with the design of homes there was Despite the effort put into maintaining a regulated city design after Peter s death the system that Trezzini designed fell to the wayside 10 Scholars consider Peter I s comprehensive urban design to be one of his greatest legacies 12 In the design of his buildings the Dutch Baroque style is visible in the types of ornamentation he preferred For columns Trezzini preferred squared pilasters as a decorative element and restricted their use to where they were structurally necessary or served a major purpose in the overall design Trezzini also took inspiration from the work of Christopher Wren whose work on the St Paul s Cathedral appears in Trezzini s sketches 9 Trezzini established the St Petersburg Chancellery of Construction and became its first director This school was the first institution to offer formal training for architects in Russia Among those who trained at the Chancellery was Mikhail Zemtsov who continued Trezzini s legacy 13 Other architects whom Trezzini worked alongside during his life and continued the construction of his buildings after his death were Carlo Giuseppe and Pietro Antonio Trezzini 9 Examples of Trezzini s architectural contributions nbsp The Summer Palace of Peter I by Dominico Trezzini nbsp The Peter Paul Church by Dominico Trezzini nbsp One of the buildings from the Twelve Colleges by Dominico Trezzini nbsp The Twelve Colleges by Dominico Trezzini Giovanni Maria Fontana edit nbsp The main building of the Grand Menshikovsky Palace in Oranienbaum designed by Giovanni Maria Fontana Mikhail Zemtsov edit Examples of Zemtsov s architectural contributions nbsp Kadriorg Palace by Mikhail Zemtsov Francesco Bartolomeo Rastrelli edit Examples of Rastrelli s architectural contributions nbsp Grand Peterhof Palace by Francesco Bartolomeo Rastrelli nbsp Grand Church of Peterhof Palace by Francesco Bartolomeo Rastrelli nbsp Hermitage Pavilion by Francesco Bartolomeo Rastrelli Georg Johann Mattarnovi edit Examples of Mattarnovi s architectural contributions nbsp The Kunstkamera museum by Georg Johann MattarnoviSee also editElizabethan BaroqueFurther reading editWilliam Craft Brumfield A History of Russian Architecture Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1993 ISBN 978 0 521 40333 7 Chapter Eight The Foundations of the Baroque in Saint Petersburg References edit Cracraft James 1988 Revolution Embodied The Building of St Petersburg The Petrine Revolution in Russian Architecture Chicago University of Chicago Press p 156 a b Shvidkovsky Dmitry 2007 Russian Imperial Baroque Russian Architecture and the West New Haven Yale University Press p 183 ISBN 9780300109122 a b c d e Cracraft James 1988 Revolution Embodied The Building of St Petersburg Petrine Revolution in Russian Architecture Chicago University of Chicago Press p 156 Brumfield William Craft 1983 Saint Petersburg The Imperial Design Gold in Azure One Thousand Years of Russian Architecture Boston Mass D R Godine pp 233 237 Brumfield William Craft 1983 Saint Petersburg The Imperial Design Gold in Azure One Thousand Years of Russian Architecture Boston Mass D R Godine p 238 ISBN 9780879234362 Cracraft James 1988 Revolution Embodied The Building of St Petersburg Petrine Revolution in Russian Architecture University of Chicago Press pp 147 148 Cracraft James 1988 Revolution Embodied The Buildings of St Petersburg Petrine Revolution in Russian Architecture University of Chicago Press pp 148 149 Cracraft James 1988 Revolution Embodied The Buildings of St Petersburg Petrine Revolution in Russian Architecture University of Chicago Press p 150 a b c Scvidkovskii D O 2007 Russian Imperial Baroque Peter the Great s Foreign Architects Dominico Trezzini Russian Architecture and the West New Haven CT Yale University Press pp 197 200 a b c Shvidkovskii D O 2007 Russian Imperial Baroque Russian Architecture and the West New Haven CT Yale University Press pp 194 195 Brumfield William Craft 1983 Saint Petersburg The Imperial Design Gold in Azure One Thousand Years of Russian Architecture Boston Mass D R Godine pp 229 ISBN 9780879234362 Brumfield William Craft 1983 Saint Petersburg The Imperial Design Gold in Azure One Thousand Years of Russian Architecture Boston Mass D R Godine pp 237 ISBN 9780879234362 Cracraft James 1988 Revolution Embodied The Building of St Petersburg The Petrine Revolution in Russian Architecture Chicago The University of Chicago Press p 158 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Petrine Baroque amp oldid 1134043340, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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