Louvre hôtel des Tournelles
Transcript of Louvre hôtel des Tournelles
Hôtel St-Pol
hôtel des Tournelles
Hôtel de Nesle
Palais de la Cité
Louvre
Early 16th century Paris
Vincennes
The Italian word rinascimento (rebirth) was already used by 15th cent. Italian
writers to indicate the restoration and reintroduction of Ancient Roman standards,
notably the orders.
Today the word Renaissance means, first of all, Italian art and architecture from
1420 (Brunelleschi) to the mid-16th cent.
In countries other than Italy the Renaissance started with the adoption of Italian
Renaissance motifs, but the resulting styles have little in common with the qualities
of the Italian Renaissance, which are a sense of stability and poise as well as
Ancient Roman forms and ornament.
The organization of the exterior space is commanded by
the proportions of the Antic orders
• ORDER: in classical architecture, a column with base, shaft & capital and entablature with architrave, frieze & cornice decorated and proportioned according to one of the accepted modes: Doric, Ionic, Corinthian (Greek) Tuscan, Composite (Roman)
Superposition of the three orders:
always a less decorated below a more decorated
• Colosseum in
Rome (69-79
AD):
– ground-level
doric
– First level
ionic
– Second level
corinthian
For the introduction of the Renaissance,
Florence took precedence over Rome
• Renaissance
architecture in Italy is
characterized by
harmony, clarity and
strength. It features
the use of classical
motifs and the
architectural orders, or
columns styles, of
Antiquity.
Brunelleschi:
Foundling hospital in
Florence (1419)
• Quattrocento
architecture prefers
arcades of slender
columns carrying
arches and a
graceful lively
decoration
• The earliest example of a systematic use of
Quattrocento pilasters occurs at the
Château de Gaillon (1502-10), close to
Rouen, constructed by the cardinal Georges
d’Amboise
• outlaying of ornaments mixing gothic and
Italian renaissance fluted half columns.
Chateau d’Azay-le-Rideau (1518-1527)
constructed for Gilles Berthelot
• a regular composition of the French
castle with the majestic italian
inspired staircase occupying the
central span and with regular registers
of windows ;
but the upper part is still medieval:
• towers and curtain walls crowned by
false crenelation supported by
consoles;
• a part of the building in the river, a
natural moat.
Chenonceaux (1515-24), constructed for Thomas Bohier
• The oldest part: different
from usual French castles
in the plan: one building
regroups all the spaces:
– squared plan surrounded
by four towers
– chapel and cabinet
hanging over the river
– central corridor that
ends up on a small
balcony dominating the
river (today in the
gallery).
• The bridge over the river constructed in the 1550 by Philibert de
l’Orme
• the upper galleries constructed about 1560 by Jean Bullant
Francis 1st
(1494-1547)
king of France 1515-1547
The king in 1527, by Jean Clouet (Louvre)
Leonardo da Vinci,
lived in Amboise at
Le Clos Lucé from
1515 until his dead
in 1519.
Constant struggle against Charles Quint
(Charles 5th) ruler of the Spanish Empire from
1516 and of the Holy Roman Empire from 1519
until 1556.
Blois (1515-24)
• reconstruction of the medieval castle
by Francis I :
• Staircases were given more
importance in French architecture
of the 16th cent than was usually
the case in Italian palaces of the
same period.
• the large open stone staircase
replaces a tower; four storey
decorated with pilasters,
balustrades, salamanders …
Chambord (1519-47)
• a central keep surrounded by towers and a lower
rempart
• the corner towers are reminiscent of the defensive
architecture of medieval castles
• the donjon is divided by a cross-shaped entrance hall
with in each corner an apartment, the crossing is
occupied by the staircase
an ingenious double-spiral staircase in the center
(possibly inspired by drawings of Leonardo da Vinci)
and tunnel-vaulted corridors to north, south, west and
east
Francis 1st Fontainebleau
The transformation of a medieval fortress into
a Renaissance castle started in 1528
Italian masters working in
France for the king:
Rosso from Florence(1594-1540)
Primaticcio (1504-1570) from
Bologna
Galerie François Ier
Salle de bal
The Louvre before 1528 The Louvre in the 1570’s
The keep of the Louvre
demolished in 1528
Pierre Lescot (1500/15-1578)
He began the rebuilding of the
Louvre in 1546-78 – birth of the
French Classicism.
– French renaissance manner in the decoration: Corinthian and Composite orders,
– plastic sculpted façade
– vertical composition in five sections
– Ground-floor very sober decoration, richer on the first floor and abundant in the attic
Essentially decorative, his style is very French and entirely lacks the monumentality of his Italian contemporaries.
He had the great advantage of the sculptor Jean Goujon’s collaboration, and his ornamental detail is therefore of greatest refinement and delicacy.
Lescot’s wing
Fontaine des Innocents,
1546-1549
architect: Pierre Lescot
sculptor: Jean Goujon originally in the corner of the streets Saint-
Denis/rue aux Fers (today rue Berger)
Hôtel Carnavalet?
(1545-51)
Philibert de l’Orme (1500/15-1570)
• French architect born in Lyon, son of a master mason
• He spent three years in Rome, probably 1533-6
• His buildings are notable for their ingenuity and sometimes outrageous
experimentations: he introduced the dome
• Almost everything that he built has been destroyed, only some fragments of
important compostions have survived
• Had a great influence on the development of French architecture through
his books: Nouvelles inventions (1561) and Architecture (1567)
The castle of Anet
constructed for Diane de Poitiers (1541-1563)
Henry II
1519-1559
Diane de Poitiers
1499/1500-1566
The chapel
1549-52
Le Palais des Tuileries
constructed for the queen Catherine de Medicis
architects: Philibert de l’Orme and Jean Bullant from 1564
Hôtel de Ville (1533-1628) -Started by Francis Ist Italian architect de Cortona
- works interrupted during the civic wars
- under Henry 4th, directed by Martin de La Vallée
French Renaissance Castle
entrance
Corner pavilion
wing
Court-yard
moat
terrace
Chimney shaft
Span or bay
Dormer window
cornice
niche moulding
pilaster
arcade