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Presented by :
Ar.Shruti
•  Giovanni	
  Battista	
  
(also	
  
Giambattista)	
  
Piranesi	
  (4	
  
October	
  1720	
  –	
  9	
  
November	
  1778)	
  
was	
  an	
  Italian	
  artist	
  
famous	
  for	
  his	
  
etchings	
  of	
  Rome	
  
and	
  of	
  fictitious	
  and	
  
atmospheric	
  
"prisons"	
  
—  Giovanni	
  Ba)sta	
  Piranesi	
  was	
  a	
  mul3-­‐
talented	
  and	
  accomplished	
  man	
  of	
  the	
  
enlightenment	
  who	
  combined	
  supreme	
  
ar3s3c	
  ability	
  and	
  historical	
  scholarship	
  
with	
  an	
  entrepreneurial	
  business	
  sense.	
  	
  
—  	
  He	
  was	
  at	
  once	
  an	
  ar3st,	
  architect,	
  
archeologist,	
  designer,	
  collector,	
  and	
  
print	
  and	
  an3qui3es	
  dealer.	
  	
  Many	
  
consider	
  him	
  one	
  of	
  the	
  most	
  
influen3al	
  ar3sts	
  in	
  the	
  development	
  
and	
  populariza3on	
  of	
  the	
  neoclassical	
  
style	
  of	
  the	
  late	
  18th	
  century.	
  	
  
—  Characteris3cs	
  of	
  Piranesi’s	
  early	
  works	
  
were	
  “the	
  unorthodox	
  combina3on	
  of	
  
classical	
  mo3fs,	
  the	
  manipula3on	
  of	
  
superhuman	
  scale,	
  the	
  organiza3on	
  of	
  
powerfully	
  receding	
  perspec3ves	
  upon	
  
diagonal	
  axes,	
  and	
  the	
  modula3on	
  of	
  
space	
  by	
  means	
  of	
  skilful	
  ligh3ng.”	
  	
  
—  Piranesi	
  etched	
  and	
  published	
  
numerous	
  folio	
  print	
  sets	
  of	
  art,	
  
architecture	
  and	
  archaeology	
  of	
  Rome	
  
and	
  environs,	
  that	
  served	
  as	
  source	
  
material	
  for	
  other	
  architects	
  and	
  
designers.	
  	
  
—  Born	
  January	
  22,	
  1713	
  in	
  
Manosque,	
  Provence	
  
—  Family	
  of	
  upper-­‐class	
  
bourgeoisie	
  
—  Studied	
  at	
  ages	
  14-­‐17	
  at	
  
college	
  at	
  Avignon	
  	
  
to	
  become	
  a	
  Jesuit	
  priest,	
  then	
  
on	
  to	
  Lyons,	
  Province.	
  
—  Par3cipated	
  in	
  public	
  
educa3on	
  with	
  the	
  Jesuits	
  
—  Developed	
  interest	
  in	
  
architecture	
  and	
  began	
  	
  
discovering	
  buildings	
  on	
  his	
  own.	
  
—  Spoke	
  publicly	
  to	
  the	
  king	
  and	
  
his	
  consorts	
  	
  
regarding	
  religious	
  and	
  poli3cal	
  
problems	
  
—  .	
  	
  	
  
—  Died	
  April	
  5,	
  1769	
  in	
  Paris,	
  
France	
  	
  
—  Interna3onal,	
  intellectual	
  movement	
  likely	
  beginning	
  with	
  the	
  poli3cal,	
  
economical,	
  moral	
  and	
  religious	
  struggles	
  in	
  Britain	
  and	
  France.	
  
—  Believed	
  in	
  reason	
  (science	
  and	
  thinking),	
  rather	
  than	
  faith	
  or	
  tradi3on:	
  The	
  
Ra3onalist	
  movement	
  
—  The	
  Enlightenment’s	
  Creed:	
  “Sapere	
  aude!”	
  (“Dare	
  to	
  know!)	
  
—  Enlightenment	
  is	
  man’s	
  release	
  from	
  his	
  self-­‐incurred	
  tutelage.	
  	
  Tutelage	
  is	
  
man’s	
  inability	
  to	
  make	
  use	
  of	
  his	
  understanding	
  without	
  direc3on	
  from	
  
another.”	
  Immanuel	
  Kant,	
  1784	
  
	
  
Denis	
  Diderot	
   Immanuel	
  Kant	
   Jean-­‐Jacques	
  Rosseau	
  Voltaire	
  
“…it	
  is	
  above	
  all	
  important	
  to	
  think.”	
  	
  -­‐Laugier	
  
—  Chapter	
  I:	
  General	
  Principles	
  of	
  
Architecture	
  
—  Ar3cle	
  I:	
  The	
  Column	
  
—  Ar3cle	
  II:	
  The	
  Entablature	
  
—  Ar3cle	
  III:	
  The	
  Pediment	
  
—  Ar3cle	
  IV:	
  The	
  Different	
  Stories	
  of	
  a	
  
Building	
  
—  Ar3cle	
  V:	
  Windows	
  and	
  Doors	
  
•  Chapter	
  II:	
  The	
  Different	
  Architectural	
  
Orders	
  
–  Article	
  I:	
  What	
  All	
  Orders	
  Have	
  in	
  
Common	
  
–  Article	
  II:	
  The	
  Doric	
  Order	
  
–  Article	
  III:	
  The	
  Ionic	
  Order	
  
–  Article	
  IV:	
  The	
  Corinthian	
  Order	
  
–  Article	
  V:	
  The	
  Different	
  Kinds	
  of	
  
Composite	
  
–  Article	
  VI:	
  How	
  to	
  Enrich	
  the	
  Various	
  
Orders	
  
–  Article	
  VII:	
  On	
  Buildings	
  without	
  any	
  
Orders	
  
•  Chapter	
  III:	
  Observations	
  on	
  the	
  Art	
  of	
  
Building	
  
–  Article	
  I:	
  On	
  the	
  Solidity	
  of	
  Buildings	
  
–  Article	
  II:	
  On	
  Convenience	
  
–  Article	
  III:	
  On	
  How	
  to	
  Observe	
  Bienseance	
  
in	
  Buildings	
  
•  Chapter	
  IV:	
  On	
  the	
  Style	
  in	
  Which	
  to	
  
Build	
  Churches	
  
•  Chapter	
  V:	
  On	
  the	
  Embellishment	
  of	
  
Towns	
  
–  Article	
  I:	
  On	
  Entries	
  of	
  Towns	
  
–  Article	
  II:	
  On	
  the	
  Layout	
  of	
  Streets	
  
–  Article	
  III:	
  On	
  the	
  Decoration	
  of	
  
Buildings	
  
	
  
•  Chapter	
  VI:	
  On	
  the	
  Embellishment	
  of	
  
Gardens	
  
—  Founded	
  on	
  simple	
  nature.	
  	
  Nature	
  indicates	
  its	
  rules.	
  
—  Example:	
  The	
  Primi3ve	
  Hut	
  
—  Tells	
  story	
  of	
  primi3ve	
  man	
  seeking	
  shelter	
  and	
  building	
  out	
  of	
  
necessity.	
  
—  What	
  this	
  man	
  built	
  became	
  the	
  basis	
  for	
  all	
  architecture	
  
	
  
—  The	
  Hut	
  is	
  made	
  of	
  the	
  following	
  architectural	
  elements:	
  
—  The	
  column	
  	
  
—  The	
  entablature	
  
—  The	
  pediment	
  
—  Marc-­‐Antoine	
  Laugier’s	
  Essay	
  on	
  Architecture	
  (1755)	
  had	
  a	
  profound	
  impact	
  on	
  all	
  
architectural	
  theories	
  from	
  the	
  moment	
  of	
  publica3on.	
  Within	
  its	
  pages	
  Laugier	
  
called	
  for	
  the	
  simplifica3on	
  of	
  architecture.	
  To	
  remove	
  all	
  the	
  ornate	
  Baroque	
  and	
  
Rococo	
  elements	
  and	
  create	
  architecture	
  that	
  everyone	
  can	
  understand	
  and	
  read	
  
the	
  structure	
  with	
  ease.	
  	
  
—  He	
  turned	
  to	
  the	
  Classical	
  architecture	
  of	
  the	
  Greek	
  and	
  Roman	
  world;	
  here	
  he	
  saw	
  
a	
  perfect	
  reference	
  to	
  the	
  ideal	
  of	
  the	
  primi%ve	
  hut.	
  
—  	
  The	
  primi%ve	
  hut	
  in	
  Laugier’s	
  mind	
  stood	
  on	
  columns	
  of	
  tree	
  trunks	
  with	
  a	
  simple	
  
gable	
  (pediment)	
  roof.	
  Columns	
  were	
  a	
  key	
  factor	
  to	
  his	
  idea	
  of	
  architectural	
  
perfec3on;	
  they	
  had	
  to	
  be	
  ver3cal,	
  free	
  standing,	
  and	
  they	
  had	
  to	
  be	
  round,	
  for	
  as	
  
he	
  states	
  “as	
  nature	
  forms	
  nothing	
  square.”	
  
—  	
  Laugier	
  fails	
  to	
  look	
  beyond	
  Europe	
  when	
  he	
  speaks	
  of	
  an	
  ideal	
  architecture,	
  and	
  
he	
  surveys	
  no	
  further	
  then	
  the	
  forest	
  for	
  the	
  ‘natural’;	
  one	
  of	
  nature’s	
  simplest	
  
compound	
  NaCl,	
  or	
  salt,	
  as	
  well	
  as	
  other	
  crystalline	
  rocks,	
  grow	
  square.	
  
• Architecture	
  was	
  founded	
  on	
  simple	
  
nature.	
  	
  	
  
	
  
• Laugier	
  wanted	
  a	
  "more	
  rigorous"	
  
understanding	
  of	
  architecture	
  and	
  
ornament:	
  look	
  for	
  precedents	
  for	
  classical	
  
architecture	
  at	
  the	
  absolute	
  roots	
  of	
  
history.	
  
	
  
• He	
  searched	
  for	
  absolute	
  beauty,	
  which	
  in	
  
his	
  primitive	
  hut	
  came	
  from	
  nature.	
  
Was	
  rooted	
  in	
  functional	
  or	
  structural	
  
basis.	
  (This	
  theory	
  was	
  the	
  basis	
  of	
  
the	
  so-­‐called	
  Rationalist	
  movement.)	
  	
  
	
  
• Little	
  basis	
  in	
  archeology	
  or	
  fact,	
  and	
  
tangental	
  basis	
  in	
  historical	
  text	
  
	
  
• 	
  Like	
  Vitruvius,	
  Laugier	
  places	
  the	
  origins	
  of	
  
architectural	
  forms	
  in	
  nature:	
  the	
  first	
  
dwelling	
  was	
  built	
  in	
  the	
  forest,	
  with	
  
branches	
  and	
  trees.	
  	
  
• 	
  This	
  differs	
  from	
  the	
  previous	
  theories	
  of	
  
Vitruvius	
  in	
  one	
  important	
  aspect:	
  the	
  hut	
  is	
  
an	
  abstract	
  concept	
  as	
  much	
  as	
  it	
  is	
  a	
  material	
  
construction.	
  	
  
• 	
  The	
  Primitive	
  Hut	
  represents	
  the	
  first	
  
architectural	
  idea.	
  
• 	
  Shows	
  beginnings	
  of	
  an	
  understanding	
  of	
  
column,	
  entablature,	
  and	
  pediments.	
  	
  Future	
  
architecture	
  is	
  based	
  on	
  these	
  principles.	
  
Article	
  I:	
  The	
  Column	
  
• Columns	
  must:	
  
– Be	
  strictly	
  perpendicular	
  to	
  the	
  ground	
  
– Be	
  free-­‐standing,	
  to	
  be	
  expressed	
  in	
  a	
  
natural	
  way	
  
– Be	
  round,	
  because	
  nature	
  makes	
  
nothing	
  square	
  
– Be	
  tapered	
  from	
  bottom	
  to	
  top	
  in	
  
imitation	
  of	
  plants	
  in	
  nature	
  
– Rest	
  directly	
  on	
  the	
  floor	
  
	
  
• The	
  faults:	
  
– “Being	
  engaged	
  in	
  the	
  wall”	
  is	
  a	
  fault	
  
because	
  it	
  detracts	
  from	
  the	
  overall	
  	
  
beauty	
  and	
  aesthetic	
  nature	
  of	
  columns.	
  
– The	
  use	
  of	
  pilasters	
  should	
  strictly	
  be	
  
frowned	
  upon	
  especially	
  since	
  in	
  nearly	
  
every	
  case	
  columns	
  could	
  be	
  used	
  
instead.	
  	
  
– Setting	
  columns	
  upon	
  pedestals	
  is	
  “like	
  
adding	
  a	
  second	
  set	
  of	
  legs	
  beneath	
  the	
  
first	
  pair.”	
  
	
  
Article	
  II:	
  The	
  Entablature	
  
• The	
  Entablature	
  must:	
  
– always	
  rest	
  on	
  its	
  columns	
  like	
  a	
  lintel	
  
– In	
  its	
  whole	
  length	
  it	
  must	
  not	
  have	
  any	
  
corner	
  or	
  projection	
  
	
  
• The	
  Faults:	
  
– Instead	
  of	
  a	
  beam-­‐like	
  structure	
  it	
  
becomes	
  an	
  arch	
  
• Against	
  nature	
  because:	
  	
  
– require	
  massive	
  piers	
  and	
  imposts	
  
– They	
  become	
  pilasters	
  	
  
– Force	
  columns	
  to	
  give	
  lateral	
  
support;	
  columns	
  are	
  meant	
  to	
  
give	
  vertical	
  support	
  only.	
  
– Not	
  straight,	
  but	
  broken	
  with	
  angles	
  and	
  
projections	
  
• Why?	
  	
  “Never	
  put	
  anything	
  into	
  a	
  
building	
  for	
  which	
  one	
  cannot	
  give	
  a	
  
sound	
  reason.”	
  	
  Nature	
  is	
  so,	
  
buildings	
  should	
  also	
  be.	
  
	
  
Article	
  III:	
  The	
  Pediment	
  
• The	
  Pediment	
  must:	
  
– represent	
  the	
  gable	
  of	
  the	
  roof	
  	
  
– never	
  be	
  anywhere	
  except	
  across	
  the	
  
width	
  of	
  a	
  building.	
  	
  	
  
– be	
  above	
  the	
  entablature	
  
	
  
	
  
• The	
  faults:	
  
– To	
  erect	
  the	
  pediment	
  on	
  the	
  long	
  side	
  
of	
  a	
  building.	
  
– To	
  make	
  non-­‐triangular	
  pediments	
  
• Should	
  not	
  be	
  curved,	
  broken	
  nor	
  
scrolled	
  
– To	
  pile	
  pediments	
  on	
  top	
  of	
  each	
  other	
  
	
  
—  THANK	
  YOU	
  

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Giovanni Battista Piranesi's Influential Etchings of Rome

  • 2.
  • 3. •  Giovanni  Battista   (also   Giambattista)   Piranesi  (4   October  1720  –  9   November  1778)   was  an  Italian  artist   famous  for  his   etchings  of  Rome   and  of  fictitious  and   atmospheric   "prisons"  
  • 4. —  Giovanni  Ba)sta  Piranesi  was  a  mul3-­‐ talented  and  accomplished  man  of  the   enlightenment  who  combined  supreme   ar3s3c  ability  and  historical  scholarship   with  an  entrepreneurial  business  sense.     —   He  was  at  once  an  ar3st,  architect,   archeologist,  designer,  collector,  and   print  and  an3qui3es  dealer.    Many   consider  him  one  of  the  most   influen3al  ar3sts  in  the  development   and  populariza3on  of  the  neoclassical   style  of  the  late  18th  century.     —  Characteris3cs  of  Piranesi’s  early  works   were  “the  unorthodox  combina3on  of   classical  mo3fs,  the  manipula3on  of   superhuman  scale,  the  organiza3on  of   powerfully  receding  perspec3ves  upon   diagonal  axes,  and  the  modula3on  of   space  by  means  of  skilful  ligh3ng.”     —  Piranesi  etched  and  published   numerous  folio  print  sets  of  art,   architecture  and  archaeology  of  Rome   and  environs,  that  served  as  source   material  for  other  architects  and   designers.    
  • 5.
  • 6.
  • 7.
  • 8.
  • 9.
  • 10.
  • 11.
  • 12.
  • 13. —  Born  January  22,  1713  in   Manosque,  Provence   —  Family  of  upper-­‐class   bourgeoisie   —  Studied  at  ages  14-­‐17  at   college  at  Avignon     to  become  a  Jesuit  priest,  then   on  to  Lyons,  Province.   —  Par3cipated  in  public   educa3on  with  the  Jesuits   —  Developed  interest  in   architecture  and  began     discovering  buildings  on  his  own.   —  Spoke  publicly  to  the  king  and   his  consorts     regarding  religious  and  poli3cal   problems   —  .       —  Died  April  5,  1769  in  Paris,   France    
  • 14. —  Interna3onal,  intellectual  movement  likely  beginning  with  the  poli3cal,   economical,  moral  and  religious  struggles  in  Britain  and  France.   —  Believed  in  reason  (science  and  thinking),  rather  than  faith  or  tradi3on:  The   Ra3onalist  movement   —  The  Enlightenment’s  Creed:  “Sapere  aude!”  (“Dare  to  know!)   —  Enlightenment  is  man’s  release  from  his  self-­‐incurred  tutelage.    Tutelage  is   man’s  inability  to  make  use  of  his  understanding  without  direc3on  from   another.”  Immanuel  Kant,  1784     Denis  Diderot   Immanuel  Kant   Jean-­‐Jacques  Rosseau  Voltaire   “…it  is  above  all  important  to  think.”    -­‐Laugier  
  • 15. —  Chapter  I:  General  Principles  of   Architecture   —  Ar3cle  I:  The  Column   —  Ar3cle  II:  The  Entablature   —  Ar3cle  III:  The  Pediment   —  Ar3cle  IV:  The  Different  Stories  of  a   Building   —  Ar3cle  V:  Windows  and  Doors   •  Chapter  II:  The  Different  Architectural   Orders   –  Article  I:  What  All  Orders  Have  in   Common   –  Article  II:  The  Doric  Order   –  Article  III:  The  Ionic  Order   –  Article  IV:  The  Corinthian  Order   –  Article  V:  The  Different  Kinds  of   Composite   –  Article  VI:  How  to  Enrich  the  Various   Orders   –  Article  VII:  On  Buildings  without  any   Orders   •  Chapter  III:  Observations  on  the  Art  of   Building   –  Article  I:  On  the  Solidity  of  Buildings   –  Article  II:  On  Convenience   –  Article  III:  On  How  to  Observe  Bienseance   in  Buildings   •  Chapter  IV:  On  the  Style  in  Which  to   Build  Churches   •  Chapter  V:  On  the  Embellishment  of   Towns   –  Article  I:  On  Entries  of  Towns   –  Article  II:  On  the  Layout  of  Streets   –  Article  III:  On  the  Decoration  of   Buildings     •  Chapter  VI:  On  the  Embellishment  of   Gardens  
  • 16. —  Founded  on  simple  nature.    Nature  indicates  its  rules.   —  Example:  The  Primi3ve  Hut   —  Tells  story  of  primi3ve  man  seeking  shelter  and  building  out  of   necessity.   —  What  this  man  built  became  the  basis  for  all  architecture     —  The  Hut  is  made  of  the  following  architectural  elements:   —  The  column     —  The  entablature   —  The  pediment  
  • 17. —  Marc-­‐Antoine  Laugier’s  Essay  on  Architecture  (1755)  had  a  profound  impact  on  all   architectural  theories  from  the  moment  of  publica3on.  Within  its  pages  Laugier   called  for  the  simplifica3on  of  architecture.  To  remove  all  the  ornate  Baroque  and   Rococo  elements  and  create  architecture  that  everyone  can  understand  and  read   the  structure  with  ease.     —  He  turned  to  the  Classical  architecture  of  the  Greek  and  Roman  world;  here  he  saw   a  perfect  reference  to  the  ideal  of  the  primi%ve  hut.   —   The  primi%ve  hut  in  Laugier’s  mind  stood  on  columns  of  tree  trunks  with  a  simple   gable  (pediment)  roof.  Columns  were  a  key  factor  to  his  idea  of  architectural   perfec3on;  they  had  to  be  ver3cal,  free  standing,  and  they  had  to  be  round,  for  as   he  states  “as  nature  forms  nothing  square.”   —   Laugier  fails  to  look  beyond  Europe  when  he  speaks  of  an  ideal  architecture,  and   he  surveys  no  further  then  the  forest  for  the  ‘natural’;  one  of  nature’s  simplest   compound  NaCl,  or  salt,  as  well  as  other  crystalline  rocks,  grow  square.  
  • 18. • Architecture  was  founded  on  simple   nature.         • Laugier  wanted  a  "more  rigorous"   understanding  of  architecture  and   ornament:  look  for  precedents  for  classical   architecture  at  the  absolute  roots  of   history.     • He  searched  for  absolute  beauty,  which  in   his  primitive  hut  came  from  nature.   Was  rooted  in  functional  or  structural   basis.  (This  theory  was  the  basis  of   the  so-­‐called  Rationalist  movement.)       • Little  basis  in  archeology  or  fact,  and   tangental  basis  in  historical  text    
  • 19. •   Like  Vitruvius,  Laugier  places  the  origins  of   architectural  forms  in  nature:  the  first   dwelling  was  built  in  the  forest,  with   branches  and  trees.     •   This  differs  from  the  previous  theories  of   Vitruvius  in  one  important  aspect:  the  hut  is   an  abstract  concept  as  much  as  it  is  a  material   construction.     •   The  Primitive  Hut  represents  the  first   architectural  idea.   •   Shows  beginnings  of  an  understanding  of   column,  entablature,  and  pediments.    Future   architecture  is  based  on  these  principles.  
  • 20. Article  I:  The  Column   • Columns  must:   – Be  strictly  perpendicular  to  the  ground   – Be  free-­‐standing,  to  be  expressed  in  a   natural  way   – Be  round,  because  nature  makes   nothing  square   – Be  tapered  from  bottom  to  top  in   imitation  of  plants  in  nature   – Rest  directly  on  the  floor     • The  faults:   – “Being  engaged  in  the  wall”  is  a  fault   because  it  detracts  from  the  overall     beauty  and  aesthetic  nature  of  columns.   – The  use  of  pilasters  should  strictly  be   frowned  upon  especially  since  in  nearly   every  case  columns  could  be  used   instead.     – Setting  columns  upon  pedestals  is  “like   adding  a  second  set  of  legs  beneath  the   first  pair.”    
  • 21. Article  II:  The  Entablature   • The  Entablature  must:   – always  rest  on  its  columns  like  a  lintel   – In  its  whole  length  it  must  not  have  any   corner  or  projection     • The  Faults:   – Instead  of  a  beam-­‐like  structure  it   becomes  an  arch   • Against  nature  because:     – require  massive  piers  and  imposts   – They  become  pilasters     – Force  columns  to  give  lateral   support;  columns  are  meant  to   give  vertical  support  only.   – Not  straight,  but  broken  with  angles  and   projections   • Why?    “Never  put  anything  into  a   building  for  which  one  cannot  give  a   sound  reason.”    Nature  is  so,   buildings  should  also  be.    
  • 22. Article  III:  The  Pediment   • The  Pediment  must:   – represent  the  gable  of  the  roof     – never  be  anywhere  except  across  the   width  of  a  building.       – be  above  the  entablature       • The  faults:   – To  erect  the  pediment  on  the  long  side   of  a  building.   – To  make  non-­‐triangular  pediments   • Should  not  be  curved,  broken  nor   scrolled   – To  pile  pediments  on  top  of  each  other