Palaces, villas and churches. These were the highlights of my first
visit to Italy. I took a lot of photos and looked forward to sharing
them with friends and family. Back home, though, I found that I
didn’t recall much about the places that impressed me. Although I
had the benefit of a half-day guide in Rome, Florence and Venice, I
sometimes had difficulty hearing what was said on crowded streets and
busy interiors. The guides were capable but had only enough time to
mention a few major features. As a rule, they skimped on actually
describing buildings that intrigued me. And so they were not
especially helpful in providing the insights I wanted. Upon my return,
I found myself wondering: Where did the architects actually find their
ideas? What did they want to accomplish? And what do their choices
tell us about their time? My sojourn in Italy would have been more
satisfying if I had come away with a fuller account of what I had
seen. What I most needed was context. This book supplies that context.
Contemplation of antiquity and the exchange of views among architects
released a surge of intellectual energy not seen for a millennium, a
development that would never have happened so quickly were it not for
Johannes Gutenberg’s invention of printing with movable type. This
development, in turn, led to architects’ heightened self-awareness
of their collective enterprise. They read what their fellow architects
wrote and thereby gained in sophistication. They were no longer merely
masons. They became architects in the modern sense. They took pride in
their achievements and shared a conviction that the visual culture
they created was far superior to that of the previous thousand years.
Their embrace of classical civilisation had a visceral urgency. Rome,
after all, was a culture with a storied past, peopled by
larger-than-life figures. To learn what the ancients had created in
word or stone could supply a shortcut to wisdom. And emulating the
Romans would provide new models of aesthetic excellence. This
endeavour became known as the Renaissance, or rebirth. The
Reformation, however, changed everything. Martin Luther brought to
issue a quandary: How exactly was Christianity to be reconciled with
the pagan past, if at all? Could one source of inspiration be
sustained without compromising the other? Religious reform questioned
the aesthetic achievements of the previous hundred years. The story of
Renaissance architecture represents the effort to find an
accommodation.
Les mer
A Personal Journey
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781839992827
Publisert
2024
Utgiver
Vendor
Anthem Press (NBN)
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter