1 / 36

Romanesque Architecture

Romanesque Architecture. Architectural History ACT 322 Doris Kemp. Topics. Romanesque Architecture: Sicily and Southern Italy Romanesque Architecture: Northern Italy Romanesque Architecture: Tuscany High Romanesque in Normandy and England.

naasir
Télécharger la présentation

Romanesque Architecture

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Romanesque Architecture Architectural History ACT 322 Doris Kemp

  2. Topics • Romanesque Architecture: Sicily and Southern Italy • Romanesque Architecture: Northern Italy • Romanesque Architecture: Tuscany • High Romanesque in Normandy and England

  3. Romanesque Architecture: Sicily and Southern Italy • Norman rulers arrived south of Rome in the mid 11th century • Influences of Byzantium and Saracenic entangled with northern European traditions • Important structures: • Norman Cathedrals of Cefalu • Church of S. Nicola, Bari

  4. Romanesque Architecture: Sicily and Southern Italy • Norman Cathedral of Cefalu • Located in Palermo, Sicily • Massive east with choir flanked by lateral chapels • Twin-towered façade • Fragile basilican nave with columnar supports • Interior featured a Byzantine mosaic of Christ

  5. Romanesque Architecture: Sicily and Southern Italy Photo: Sullivan

  6. Romanesque Architecture: Sicily and Southern Italy • Church of S. Nicola • Located in Bari, Southern Italy • A fusion of early Christian with steep proportions of Norman models Photo: Sullivan

  7. Romanesque Architecture: Northern Italy • Structures in Northern Italy had a strong classical tradition, but openness to adventurous spirit • Less conservative than the south • Reflected the political and cultural individualism of the North

  8. Romanesque Architecture: Northern Italy • Cathedral at Modena • c. 1099 • 15th century rib vaulting • Diaphragm arches • Open timber roof • Double-bay system • Triple-gallery arcade

  9. Romanesque Architecture: Northern Italy Photo: Sullivan

  10. Romanesque Architecture: Northern Italy • S. Ambrogio, Milan • Triple apses • Barrel-vaulted forchoirs • Nave of four huge vaulted bays, aisles, and galleries • Atrium was almost as large as the church • Featured a deep facade structure flanked by towers • Rib vaulting • Became a major feature of Gothic architecture

  11. Romanesque Architecture: Northern Italy Photo: Sullivan

  12. Romanesque Architecture: Northern Italy Photo: Sullivan

  13. Romanesque Architecture: Northern Italy Photo: Sullivan

  14. Romanesque Architecture: Tuscany • Tuscany was fortunate to have a wide range of building materials • Marble • This helped to reinforce the classical tendency of their architecture

  15. Romanesque Architecture: Tuscany • Pisan (Pisa) • Remarkable as a group of structures • Cemetery, basilica, tower, and baptistery • All featured a standard style • Same geometric clarity and sense of volume • Same decorative system and scale • Same color, texture, and materials

  16. Romanesque Architecture: Tuscany Photo: Sullivan

  17. Romanesque Architecture: Tuscany Photo: Sullivan

  18. Romanesque Architecture: Tuscany • Florentine • Rational, disciplined articulation • Sharp, exquisite Classical detail • Two dimensional • Key Structures • Baptistery of S. Giovanni, Florence • Church of S. Miniato al Monte, Florence

  19. Romanesque Architecture: Tuscany • Baptistery of S. Giovanni, Florence • c. 1153 • Interior resembles the Pantheon • Centralized plan • Freestanding Corinthian columns • Exterior elevation mirrors the interior

  20. Romanesque Architecture: Tuscany Photo: Sullivan

  21. Romanesque Architecture: Tuscany Photo: Sullivan

  22. Romanesque Architecture: Tuscany • Church of S. Miniato al Monte, Florence • Medium-sized unvaulted basilica • Interior separated by three large bays • Rich, paneled arcading • Features a half-dome mosaic

  23. Romanesque Architecture: Tuscany Photo: Sullivan

  24. Romanesque Architecture: Tuscany Photo: Sullivan

  25. High Romanesque in England • In these locations a new concept of nave wall appeared • Major structures • Durham Cathedral, England • Ely Cathedral, England

  26. High Romanesque in England • Durham Cathedral • c. 1093 -1130 • Linear decorative accents • Choir-aisle vaults • Nave vaults formed a unique double-X pattern of ribs • Shows that rib vaulting was a crucial development for the Gothic period of architecture

  27. High Romanesque in England Photo: Sullivan

  28. High Romanesque in England Photo: Sullivan

  29. High Romanesque in England Photo: Sullivan

  30. High Romanesque in England • Ely Cathedral Photo: Sullivan

  31. High Romanesque in England Photo: Sullivan

  32. High Romanesque in England Photo: Sullivan

  33. High Romanesque in England • Winchester Cathedral Photo: Sullivan

  34. High Romanesque in England Photo: Sullivan

  35. References • Sullivan, Mary; http://www.bluffton.edu/~sullivanm/ • http://www.brynmawr.edu/Acads/Cities/wld/wdpt1.html • Trachtenburg/Hyman; Architecture: From Prehistory to Postmodernity • Wodehouse/Moffett; A History of Western Architecture

  36. Romanesque Architecture Architectural History ACT 322 Doris Kemp

More Related