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Jefferson and Palladio: Constructing a New World

Jefferson and Palladio: Constructing a New World

Guido Beltramini
0/5 ( ratings)
- The catalogue offers an opportunity to acquire a deeper understanding of Jefferson's architecture and, at the same time, leads to a clearer understanding of Palladio himself- Jefferson looked to Palladio because he was the architect of one of Europe's few republics, in which administrative power was in the hands of landed gentlemen, who avoided the ostentation of princely manners and spent long periods of time in the countryside- Published to accompany an exhibition: Jefferson and Palladio: Constructing a New World, Vicenza, Palladium Museum, 19 September 2015 - 28 March 2016Thomas Jefferson , a cosmopolitan figure with rural roots, was a master of the knowledge of his time. He drafted The Declaration of Independence , and thus founded a new view of the proper relation between governed and government. Jefferson was the architect of the new America, not just in a political sense, but in a literal sense as well. Architecture had an important place in his personal and public agenda. A self-taught architect, Jefferson buildings are amongst America's most famous: Monticello, the Virginia State Capitol and the University of Virginia are the starting points of American classical architecture.Jefferson was guided by his admiration for Palladio's Four Books on Architecture, which provided him with key architectural forms and ideas. Palladio showed him how the admired building types of the ancient Romans could be adapted to modern purposes and provide a rational, harmonious framework for living and for building a new society.Contents: Palladio in America by James S. Ackerman; Jefferson and Palladio by Guido Beltramini; Jefferson: Architecture and Democracy by Fulvio Lenzo; Photographing Jefferson by Filippo Romano; Palladianism in America Before Jefferson by Bruce Boucher; The National Survey Grid and the American Democracy by Catherine Maumi; Jefferson's Creation of American Classical Architecture by Richard Guy Wilson; Jefferson and the First Public Statues in the United States by Giovanna Capitelli; Canova and the Monument to George Washington by Mario Guderzo; Palladio: Materials and Building Techniques Damiana by Lucia Patern�; Jefferson Builder by Travis McDonald. ENTRIES: Monticello; Virginia State Capitol; President's House; Poplar Forest; Bremo; Barboursville; University of Virginia Bibliographiy of works cited List of the ExhibitsGuido Beltramini is Director of the Centro Internazionale di Studi di Architettura Andrea Palladio, Vicenza. Fulvio Lenzo is Associate Professor in the history of architecture at the Universit� IUAV di Venezia, Venice.Contributions by: James Ackerman, Guido Beltramini, Bruce Boucher, Catherine Maumi, Richard Guy Wilson, Giovanna Capitelli, Mario Guderzo, Damiana Lucia Patern�, Travis McDonald. Photography by Filippo Romano.
Pages
176
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Officina Libraria
Release
April 18, 2016
ISBN
8897737781
ISBN 13
9788897737780

Jefferson and Palladio: Constructing a New World

Guido Beltramini
0/5 ( ratings)
- The catalogue offers an opportunity to acquire a deeper understanding of Jefferson's architecture and, at the same time, leads to a clearer understanding of Palladio himself- Jefferson looked to Palladio because he was the architect of one of Europe's few republics, in which administrative power was in the hands of landed gentlemen, who avoided the ostentation of princely manners and spent long periods of time in the countryside- Published to accompany an exhibition: Jefferson and Palladio: Constructing a New World, Vicenza, Palladium Museum, 19 September 2015 - 28 March 2016Thomas Jefferson , a cosmopolitan figure with rural roots, was a master of the knowledge of his time. He drafted The Declaration of Independence , and thus founded a new view of the proper relation between governed and government. Jefferson was the architect of the new America, not just in a political sense, but in a literal sense as well. Architecture had an important place in his personal and public agenda. A self-taught architect, Jefferson buildings are amongst America's most famous: Monticello, the Virginia State Capitol and the University of Virginia are the starting points of American classical architecture.Jefferson was guided by his admiration for Palladio's Four Books on Architecture, which provided him with key architectural forms and ideas. Palladio showed him how the admired building types of the ancient Romans could be adapted to modern purposes and provide a rational, harmonious framework for living and for building a new society.Contents: Palladio in America by James S. Ackerman; Jefferson and Palladio by Guido Beltramini; Jefferson: Architecture and Democracy by Fulvio Lenzo; Photographing Jefferson by Filippo Romano; Palladianism in America Before Jefferson by Bruce Boucher; The National Survey Grid and the American Democracy by Catherine Maumi; Jefferson's Creation of American Classical Architecture by Richard Guy Wilson; Jefferson and the First Public Statues in the United States by Giovanna Capitelli; Canova and the Monument to George Washington by Mario Guderzo; Palladio: Materials and Building Techniques Damiana by Lucia Patern�; Jefferson Builder by Travis McDonald. ENTRIES: Monticello; Virginia State Capitol; President's House; Poplar Forest; Bremo; Barboursville; University of Virginia Bibliographiy of works cited List of the ExhibitsGuido Beltramini is Director of the Centro Internazionale di Studi di Architettura Andrea Palladio, Vicenza. Fulvio Lenzo is Associate Professor in the history of architecture at the Universit� IUAV di Venezia, Venice.Contributions by: James Ackerman, Guido Beltramini, Bruce Boucher, Catherine Maumi, Richard Guy Wilson, Giovanna Capitelli, Mario Guderzo, Damiana Lucia Patern�, Travis McDonald. Photography by Filippo Romano.
Pages
176
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Officina Libraria
Release
April 18, 2016
ISBN
8897737781
ISBN 13
9788897737780

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