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Sebastiano Serlio

Sebastiano Serlio (6 September 1475 – c. 1554) was an Italian Mannerist architect, who was part of the Italian team building the Palace of Fontainebleau. Serlio helped canonize the classical orders of architecture in his influential treatise variously known as I sette libri dell'architettura ("Seven Books of Architecture") or Tutte l'opere d'architettura et prospetiva ("All the works on architecture and perspective").

Sebastiano Serlio
Fanciful Portrait of Sebastiano Serlio (Print by Vincenzo Raggio)
Born6 September 1475
Bologna, Italy
Diedc. 1554 (aged 78–79)
NationalityItalian
OccupationArchitect
ProjectsI Sette libri dell'architettura
Serlio's canon of the five orders of architecture

Early life edit

 
Serlio's model of a church façade of 1537 crystallized a format that lasted into the 18th century.

Born in Bologna, Serlio went to Rome in 1514, and worked in the atelier of Baldassare Peruzzi, where he stayed until the Sack of Rome in 1527 put all architectural projects on hold for a time. Like Peruzzi, he began as a painter. He lived in Venice from about 1527 to the early 1540s but left little mark on the city.

Serlio's model of a church façade was a regularized version, cleaned up and made more classical, of the innovative method of providing a façade to a church with a high vaulted nave flanked by low side aisles, providing a classical face to a Gothic form, that was first seen in Alberti's Santa Maria Novella in Florence (c. 1458). The idea was in the air in the 1530s: several contemporary churches compete for primacy, but Serlio's woodcut put the concept in every architect's hands. As a civil engineer he designed fortifications.

Serlio's publications, rather than any spectacular executed work, attracted the attention of François I. Serlio's career took off when the king invited him to France, to advise on the construction and decoration of the Château of Fontainebleau, where a team of Italian designers and craftsmen were assembled (including Giacomo Barozzi da Vignola and Benvenuto Cellini). Serlio took several private commissions, but the only one that has survived in any recognizable way is the Chateau of Ancy-le-Franc, built about 1546 near Tonnerre in Burgundy.

Serlio died around 1554 in the Fontainebleau section of Paris, after spending his last years in Lyon.

Treatise on architecture edit

 
A page from the seventh book
 
Two pages from the eighth book

Tutte l'opere d'architettura et prospetiva (All the Works of Architecture and Perspective) is Serlio's practical treatise on architecture.[1] Although Leon Battista Alberti produced the first book-length architectural treatise of the Renaissance (c. 1450, published in 1486),[2] it was unillustrated, written in Latin, and designed to appeal as much to learned humanists and potential patrons as to architects and builders. Serlio pioneered the use of high quality illustrations to supplement the text. He wrote in Italian, some of his books being published with parallel texts in Italian and French. His treatise catered explicitly to the needs of architects, builders, and craftsmen.

The treatise is composed of eight books, the sixth of which was lost for some centuries and the eighth of which was not published until relatively recently. The eighth book is not always considered to be part of the treatise. The first five books cover Serlio's works on geometry, perspective, Roman antiquity, the orders and church design. The sixth illustrates domestic designs ranging from peasant huts to royal palaces, providing a unique record of Renaissance house types, including up-to-date fortresses for tyrants and mercenaries as well as Serlio's unbuilt design for the Louvre. The seventh book illustrates a range of common design problems ignored by past theorists, including how to remodel, or 'restore', Gothic façades following antique principles of symmetry and proportion. The eighth book, called "Castrametation of the Romans", reconstructs a Roman encampment after the description by Polybius, followed by a military city and monumental bridge supposedly built by the Emperor Trajan. With its forum, consul's palace and baths, the book is part-fantasy and part-archaeology, quite unlike Serlio's other more practical works. [3]

In the introduction to Book IV, Serlio credits his recently deceased mentor for much of its content: "As for all the pleasant things which you will find in this book, you should give the credit not to me but to my teacher, Baldassare Peruzzi from Siena..."[4] The extent of Peruzzi's contribution to the treatise is unknown. "Peruzzi had been the guiding spirit in the detailed study of the remains of antiquity, and he had left his drawings to Serlio. Vasari and Cellini would give most of the credit for the book to Peruzzi, but more recent writers defend Serlio's part in the study and his good faith in completing the work of his companion."[5]

Plan and publication edit

By 1537, when the earliest of his books was published, Serlio had been working on the treatise for at least a decade and had already organized it as a work in seven books. Although Serlio completed all seven projected books, only the first five books were published during his lifetime. The sixth remained in manuscript until the 20th century.[6] He composed two additional books, which can be thought of as appendices: the Extraordinary Book of Doors, the last book he saw through the press; and On Polybius' Castrametation, a discussion of ancient Roman military camp design, whose state of completion and intended relation to the other books are both uncertain.

Publication order of the books, compared with Serlio's numerical order:[7]
4 1537 Venice On the Five Styles of Buildings
3 1540 Venice On Antiquities
1 2 1545 Paris On Geometry, On Perspective
5 1547 Paris On Temples
X 1551 Lyon Extraordinary Book of Doors[8]
7 1575 Frankfurt On Situations (posthumous)
6 1966 Milan On Habitations (posthumous; MS facsimile)
Y 1994 Milan On Polybius' Castrametation (posthumous)

It is not certain what title, if any, Serlio intended for the work as a whole—possibly General Rules of Architecture, as is given on the first-published book, but this soon became attached specifically to that book.[9] Various collections were known as the Five or Seven Books on Architecture, depending on their content. Often it is referred to simply as Serlio's Architettura, and several significant editions take the title Tutte l'opere d'architettura et prospetiva ("All the works on architecture and perspective"); though the first time that all nine existing books (or even all seven numbered books) were in fact published in a single edition was in the 2-volume English translation of 1996–2001.[10]

Content edit

Although the books apparently appeared more or less in Serlio's desired publication order, his nominal order provides a distinct flow from general to specific:

Serlio's reader moves from: first, the Euclidean 'heaven' composed of the definitions of geometry comprising point, line and perfect (square) planes; second, the underlying, three-dimensional forms of Nature represented through the theory of perspective; third, the architectural embodiment of perfect form reflected in the Pantheon and the 'idealised' monuments of antiquity; fourth, the rules of the Orders, progressing from Tuscan to Composite, as evidenced in antique ruins and the text of Vitruvius, and the universality of the Orders in composing doors, fireplaces and palace façades; fifth, the use of the Orders in temples of Serlio's invention; sixth, the use of the Orders in house designs (again graded, ascending from hut to palace); concluding at the lowest, seventh stage with 'accidents' or practical problems which the architect might encounter.[11]

Significantly, the last few pages of the second book, "On Perspective", contain three theatrical scenes (comic, tragic, and satiric) and a stage plan and cross section which were highly influential in Renaissance theater.

In Aesthetics point of view Serlio is one of the first that use the expression fine arts: "and lately Leo X father and patron of all fine arts and all good artists".[12]

Influence edit

Serlio's volumes were highly influential in France, the Netherlands and England as a conveyor of the Italian Renaissance style, and quickly became available in a variety of languages. His plans and elevations of many Roman buildings provided useful repertory of classical images, often reprinted.

Within five years of its original publication, the Flemish scholar Pieter Coecke van Aelst published, in Antwerp, adaptations of Book IV in Flemish, German, and French; Serlio considered these unauthorized versions of his work to be inferior forgeries; nevertheless they served as significant vectors in the spread of his influence.[13] Coecke van Aelst's pupil the Dutch architect and engineer Hans Vredeman de Vries propagated Serlio's style and ornaments north of the Alps. And a Dutch version of Books I-V -- published in Amsterdam in 1606 and based largely on Coecke van Aelst's work in Flemish—served as the basis for the English translation of Books I-V published by Robert Peake in London in 1611. Fourth-hand though it was, it remained the most complete English edition of Serlio for almost four centuries. Its example countered the influence of the engravings of Antwerp Mannerism that were the main inspiration for Jacobean architecture. Later Serlio's book was in the libraries of Sir Christopher Wren and John Wood, the Elder the architect and entrepreneur who laid out Bath. Inigo Jones possessed Italian editions, which he annotated.[14]

Books III & IV were published in Spanish in 1552 in Toledo by Juan de Ayala with the same illustrations as the original Italian editions.

Notes edit

 
Extraordinario libro di architettura, 1567
  1. ^ Serlio, Sebastiano (1611). "Five Bookes of Architecture". Robert Peake. Retrieved 6 August 2018.
  2. ^ Alberti 1988, p.xvi,xviii
  3. ^ Hon, Giora; Goldstein, Bernard R. (2005). "From proportion to balance: the background to symmetry in science". Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A. 36 (1): 1–21. Bibcode:2005SHPSA..36....1H. doi:10.1016/j.shpsa.2004.12.001.
  4. ^ Hart & Hicks 1996, p. 253.
  5. ^ Allardyce Nicoll: "Sebastiano Serlio, 1475-1554" in Hewitt 1958, p. 19.
  6. ^ One manuscript of Book VI is in the Avery Architectural Library, Columbia University. A second manuscript of Book VI as well as a manuscript of "On Polybius' Castrametation" (sometimes referred to as "Book VIII") are in the Staatsbibliothek, Munich.
  7. ^ Hart & Hicks 1996, p. xxv
  8. ^ Because Serlio projected a 7-book treatise, and book 6 remained in manuscript, this book has been logically but incorrectly labelled "Book VI" in some editions.
  9. ^ Hart & Hicks 1996, p. xxxix
  10. ^ Hart & Hicks 2001, p. liv
  11. ^ Hart & Hicks 1996, p. xxvi
  12. ^ Regole generali della architettura,book IV: "et ultimamente Leone X padre, et protettore di tutte le belle arti, et di tutti i buoni operatori"
  13. ^ Hart & Hicks 1996, p. xxxii-xxxiii, 470.
  14. ^ Hart & Hicks 1996, p. xxxiv.

References edit

  • Alberti, Leon Battista (1988), On the Art of Building in Ten Books, Cambridge MA: MIT Press, ISBN 0-262-01099-2 (translated by Joseph Rykwert, Neil Leach & Robert Tavernor)
  • Hart, Vaughan; Hicks, Peter, eds. (1996), Sebastiano Serlio on Architecture Volume One: Books I-V of 'Tutte L'Opere D'Architettura et Prospetiva', New Haven & London: Yale University Press, ISBN 0-300-06286-9
  • Hart, Vaughan; Hicks, Peter, eds. (2001), Sebastiano Serlio on Architecture Volume Two: Books VI and VII of 'Tutte L'Opere D'Architettura et Prospetiva', with 'Castrametation of the Romans' and 'The Extraordinary Book of Doors', New Haven & London: Yale University Press, ISBN 0-300-08503-6
  • Hart, Vaughan, Day, Alan (1995). ‘A Computer Model of the Theatre of Sebastiano Serlio, 1545’, Computers and the History of Art, Harwood Academic Publishers, vol.5 no.1, pp.41-52.
  • Hart, Vaughan (1998), ‘Decorum and the five Order of Architecture: Sebastiano Serlio’s Military City’, RES: Journal of Anthropology and Aesthetics, pp.75-84.
  • Hart, Vaughan (2003). ‘“Of little or even no importance to the architect.” On Absent Ideals in Serlio’s Drawings in the Sixth Book on Domestic Architecture’, in The Rise of the Image: Essays on the History of the Illustrated Art Book, Series Title: Histories of Vision, volume one, edited by Rodney Palmer and Thomas Frangenberg, pp.87-104.
  • Hewitt, Barnard, ed. (1958), The Renaissance Stage: Documents of Serlio, Sabbattini, Furttenbach, Coral Gables, FL: University of Miami Press (SBN 87024-004-8)
  • A translation by Vaughan Hart and Peter Hicks of Paolo Rosci's notes to the Munich MS Book VI at: http://www.serlio.net/

External links edit

  • Extraordinario libro di architettvra 1560. From the Rare Book and Special Collections Division at the Library of Congress
  • Regole generali di architetvra sopra le cinqve maniere de gliedifici... 1537. From the Rare Book and Special Collections Division at the Library of Congress
  • Il terzo libro, nel qval si figvrano... 1540. From the Rare Book and Special Collections Division at the Library of Congress
  • Palladio's Literary Predecessors
  • Château de Fontainebleau (in English)
  • Online Editions of Serlio's Architettura
    • Bibliography and books on line
  • Trattato di architettura (in Italian). Venezia: eredi Francesco De Franceschi (senese). 1600.
    • Dutch: De vijf boeken van architecturen Sebastiani Serlii (Amsterdam, 1606)
    • English: The Five Books of Architecture (London, 1611)

sebastiano, serlio, september, 1475, 1554, italian, mannerist, architect, part, italian, team, building, palace, fontainebleau, serlio, helped, canonize, classical, orders, architecture, influential, treatise, variously, known, sette, libri, dell, architettura. Sebastiano Serlio 6 September 1475 c 1554 was an Italian Mannerist architect who was part of the Italian team building the Palace of Fontainebleau Serlio helped canonize the classical orders of architecture in his influential treatise variously known as I sette libri dell architettura Seven Books of Architecture or Tutte l opere d architettura et prospetiva All the works on architecture and perspective Sebastiano SerlioFanciful Portrait of Sebastiano Serlio Print by Vincenzo Raggio Born6 September 1475Bologna ItalyDiedc 1554 aged 78 79 Fontainebleau FranceNationalityItalianOccupationArchitectProjectsI Sette libri dell architetturaSerlio s canon of the five orders of architecture Contents 1 Early life 2 Treatise on architecture 2 1 Plan and publication 2 2 Content 2 3 Influence 3 Notes 4 References 5 External linksEarly life edit nbsp Serlio s model of a church facade of 1537 crystallized a format that lasted into the 18th century Born in Bologna Serlio went to Rome in 1514 and worked in the atelier of Baldassare Peruzzi where he stayed until the Sack of Rome in 1527 put all architectural projects on hold for a time Like Peruzzi he began as a painter He lived in Venice from about 1527 to the early 1540s but left little mark on the city Serlio s model of a church facade was a regularized version cleaned up and made more classical of the innovative method of providing a facade to a church with a high vaulted nave flanked by low side aisles providing a classical face to a Gothic form that was first seen in Alberti s Santa Maria Novella in Florence c 1458 The idea was in the air in the 1530s several contemporary churches compete for primacy but Serlio s woodcut put the concept in every architect s hands As a civil engineer he designed fortifications Serlio s publications rather than any spectacular executed work attracted the attention of Francois I Serlio s career took off when the king invited him to France to advise on the construction and decoration of the Chateau of Fontainebleau where a team of Italian designers and craftsmen were assembled including Giacomo Barozzi da Vignola and Benvenuto Cellini Serlio took several private commissions but the only one that has survived in any recognizable way is the Chateau of Ancy le Franc built about 1546 near Tonnerre in Burgundy Serlio died around 1554 in the Fontainebleau section of Paris after spending his last years in Lyon Treatise on architecture edit nbsp A page from the seventh book nbsp Two pages from the eighth bookTutte l opere d architettura et prospetiva All the Works of Architecture and Perspective is Serlio s practical treatise on architecture 1 Although Leon Battista Alberti produced the first book length architectural treatise of the Renaissance c 1450 published in 1486 2 it was unillustrated written in Latin and designed to appeal as much to learned humanists and potential patrons as to architects and builders Serlio pioneered the use of high quality illustrations to supplement the text He wrote in Italian some of his books being published with parallel texts in Italian and French His treatise catered explicitly to the needs of architects builders and craftsmen The treatise is composed of eight books the sixth of which was lost for some centuries and the eighth of which was not published until relatively recently The eighth book is not always considered to be part of the treatise The first five books cover Serlio s works on geometry perspective Roman antiquity the orders and church design The sixth illustrates domestic designs ranging from peasant huts to royal palaces providing a unique record of Renaissance house types including up to date fortresses for tyrants and mercenaries as well as Serlio s unbuilt design for the Louvre The seventh book illustrates a range of common design problems ignored by past theorists including how to remodel or restore Gothic facades following antique principles of symmetry and proportion The eighth book called Castrametation of the Romans reconstructs a Roman encampment after the description by Polybius followed by a military city and monumental bridge supposedly built by the Emperor Trajan With its forum consul s palace and baths the book is part fantasy and part archaeology quite unlike Serlio s other more practical works 3 In the introduction to Book IV Serlio credits his recently deceased mentor for much of its content As for all the pleasant things which you will find in this book you should give the credit not to me but to my teacher Baldassare Peruzzi from Siena 4 The extent of Peruzzi s contribution to the treatise is unknown Peruzzi had been the guiding spirit in the detailed study of the remains of antiquity and he had left his drawings to Serlio Vasari and Cellini would give most of the credit for the book to Peruzzi but more recent writers defend Serlio s part in the study and his good faith in completing the work of his companion 5 Plan and publication edit By 1537 when the earliest of his books was published Serlio had been working on the treatise for at least a decade and had already organized it as a work in seven books Although Serlio completed all seven projected books only the first five books were published during his lifetime The sixth remained in manuscript until the 20th century 6 He composed two additional books which can be thought of as appendices the Extraordinary Book of Doors the last book he saw through the press and On Polybius Castrametation a discussion of ancient Roman military camp design whose state of completion and intended relation to the other books are both uncertain Publication order of the books compared with Serlio s numerical order 7 4 1537 Venice On the Five Styles of Buildings3 1540 Venice On Antiquities1 2 1545 Paris On Geometry On Perspective5 1547 Paris On TemplesX 1551 Lyon Extraordinary Book of Doors 8 7 1575 Frankfurt On Situations posthumous 6 1966 Milan On Habitations posthumous MS facsimile Y 1994 Milan On Polybius Castrametation posthumous It is not certain what title if any Serlio intended for the work as a whole possibly General Rules of Architecture as is given on the first published book but this soon became attached specifically to that book 9 Various collections were known as the Five or Seven Books on Architecture depending on their content Often it is referred to simply as Serlio s Architettura and several significant editions take the title Tutte l opere d architettura et prospetiva All the works on architecture and perspective though the first time that all nine existing books or even all seven numbered books were in fact published in a single edition was in the 2 volume English translation of 1996 2001 10 Content edit Although the books apparently appeared more or less in Serlio s desired publication order his nominal order provides a distinct flow from general to specific Serlio s reader moves from first the Euclidean heaven composed of the definitions of geometry comprising point line and perfect square planes second the underlying three dimensional forms of Nature represented through the theory of perspective third the architectural embodiment of perfect form reflected in the Pantheon and the idealised monuments of antiquity fourth the rules of the Orders progressing from Tuscan to Composite as evidenced in antique ruins and the text of Vitruvius and the universality of the Orders in composing doors fireplaces and palace facades fifth the use of the Orders in temples of Serlio s invention sixth the use of the Orders in house designs again graded ascending from hut to palace concluding at the lowest seventh stage with accidents or practical problems which the architect might encounter 11 Significantly the last few pages of the second book On Perspective contain three theatrical scenes comic tragic and satiric and a stage plan and cross section which were highly influential in Renaissance theater In Aesthetics point of view Serlio is one of the first that use the expression fine arts and lately Leo X father and patron of all fine arts and all good artists 12 Influence edit Serlio s volumes were highly influential in France the Netherlands and England as a conveyor of the Italian Renaissance style and quickly became available in a variety of languages His plans and elevations of many Roman buildings provided useful repertory of classical images often reprinted Within five years of its original publication the Flemish scholar Pieter Coecke van Aelst published in Antwerp adaptations of Book IV in Flemish German and French Serlio considered these unauthorized versions of his work to be inferior forgeries nevertheless they served as significant vectors in the spread of his influence 13 Coecke van Aelst s pupil the Dutch architect and engineer Hans Vredeman de Vries propagated Serlio s style and ornaments north of the Alps And a Dutch version of Books I V published in Amsterdam in 1606 and based largely on Coecke van Aelst s work in Flemish served as the basis for the English translation of Books I V published by Robert Peake in London in 1611 Fourth hand though it was it remained the most complete English edition of Serlio for almost four centuries Its example countered the influence of the engravings of Antwerp Mannerism that were the main inspiration for Jacobean architecture Later Serlio s book was in the libraries of Sir Christopher Wren and John Wood the Elder the architect and entrepreneur who laid out Bath Inigo Jones possessed Italian editions which he annotated 14 Books III amp IV were published in Spanish in 1552 in Toledo by Juan de Ayala with the same illustrations as the original Italian editions Examples of Serlio s influence nbsp Influence on hotel d Assezat s facades nbsp Influence on hotel d Assezat s portal nbsp Influence on hotel Molinier s portal nbsp Influence on a former gate of Toulouse Capitole nbsp Influence on Maison du Crible s gate Notes edit nbsp Extraordinario libro di architettura 1567 Serlio Sebastiano 1611 Five Bookes of Architecture Robert Peake Retrieved 6 August 2018 Alberti 1988 p xvi xviii Hon Giora Goldstein Bernard R 2005 From proportion to balance the background to symmetry in science Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 36 1 1 21 Bibcode 2005SHPSA 36 1H doi 10 1016 j shpsa 2004 12 001 Hart amp Hicks 1996 p 253 Allardyce Nicoll Sebastiano Serlio 1475 1554 in Hewitt 1958 p 19 One manuscript of Book VI is in the Avery Architectural Library Columbia University A second manuscript of Book VI as well as a manuscript of On Polybius Castrametation sometimes referred to as Book VIII are in the Staatsbibliothek Munich Hart amp Hicks 1996 p xxv Because Serlio projected a 7 book treatise and book 6 remained in manuscript this book has been logically but incorrectly labelled Book VI in some editions Hart amp Hicks 1996 p xxxix Hart amp Hicks 2001 p liv Hart amp Hicks 1996 p xxvi Regole generali della architettura book IV et ultimamente Leone X padre et protettore di tutte le belle arti et di tutti i buoni operatori Hart amp Hicks 1996 p xxxii xxxiii 470 Hart amp Hicks 1996 p xxxiv References editAlberti Leon Battista 1988 On the Art of Building in Ten Books Cambridge MA MIT Press ISBN 0 262 01099 2 translated by Joseph Rykwert Neil Leach amp Robert Tavernor Hart Vaughan Hicks Peter eds 1996 Sebastiano Serlio on Architecture Volume One Books I V of Tutte L Opere D Architettura et Prospetiva New Haven amp London Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 06286 9 Hart Vaughan Hicks Peter eds 2001 Sebastiano Serlio on Architecture Volume Two Books VI and VII of Tutte L Opere D Architettura et Prospetiva with Castrametation of the Romans and The Extraordinary Book of Doors New Haven amp London Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 08503 6 Hart Vaughan Day Alan 1995 A Computer Model of the Theatre of Sebastiano Serlio 1545 Computers and the History of Art Harwood Academic Publishers vol 5 no 1 pp 41 52 Hart Vaughan 1998 Decorum and the five Order of Architecture Sebastiano Serlio s Military City RES Journal of Anthropology and Aesthetics pp 75 84 Hart Vaughan 2003 Of little or even no importance to the architect On Absent Ideals in Serlio s Drawings in the Sixth Book on Domestic Architecture in The Rise of the Image Essays on the History of the Illustrated Art Book Series Title Histories of Vision volume one edited by Rodney Palmer and Thomas Frangenberg pp 87 104 Hewitt Barnard ed 1958 The Renaissance Stage Documents of Serlio Sabbattini Furttenbach Coral Gables FL University of Miami Press SBN 87024 004 8 A translation by Vaughan Hart and Peter Hicks of Paolo Rosci s notes to the Munich MS Book VI at http www serlio net External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sebastiano Serlio Extraordinario libro di architettvra 1560 From the Rare Book and Special Collections Division at the Library of Congress Regole generali di architetvra sopra le cinqve maniere de gliedifici 1537 From the Rare Book and Special Collections Division at the Library of Congress Il terzo libro nel qval si figvrano 1540 From the Rare Book and Special Collections Division at the Library of Congress Palladio s Literary Predecessors Chateau de Fontainebleau in English Online Editions of Serlio s Architettura Bibliography and books on line Trattato di architettura in Italian Venezia eredi Francesco De Franceschi senese 1600 Dutch De vijf boeken van architecturen Sebastiani Serlii Amsterdam 1606 Book I Book II Book III Book IV Book V English The Five Books of Architecture London 1611 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sebastiano Serlio amp oldid 1156653883, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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