Baroque Paris 75004 Temple du Marais (temple Sainte-Marie) 20151213.jpg|
Temple du Marais, Paris, by François Mansart, San Carlo alle Quattro Fontane - Front.jpg|
San Carlo alle Quattro Fontane, Rome, by
Francesco Borromini, 1638-1677 File:Palacio Real, Ámsterdam, Países Bajos, 2016-05-30, DD 07-09 HDR.jpg|
Royal Palace of Amsterdam,
Amsterdam,
The Netherlands, by
Jacob van Campen, 1648–1665 St Peter's Square, Vatican City - April 2007.jpg|
St. Peter's Square, Rome, by
Gian Lorenzo Bernini, 1656-1667 Kasteel van Vaux-le-Vicomte - Maincy 06.jpg|Gardens at
Vaux-le-Vicomte, France, by
André Le Nôtre, 1657-1661 Cour de Marbre du Château de Versailles October 5, 2011.jpg|Marble Court of the
Palace of Versailles,
Versailles, France, by
Louis Le Vau and
Jules Hardouin-Mansart, - 1715 Cathédrale Saint-Louis-des-Invalides, 140309 2.jpg|
Dôme des Invalides, Paris, by
Jules Hardouin-Mansart, 1677-1706 Palace of Versailles June 2010.jpg|Garden façade of the Palace of Versailles, by Jules Hardouin-Mansart, 1678–1688 Wien Graben Pestsäule Ostseite.jpg|
Plague Column, Vienna, by
Matthias Rauchmiller and
Johann Bernhard Fischer von Erlach, 1682 and 1694 Versailles Chapel - July 2006 edit.jpg|
Chapel of the Palace of Versailles, 1696–1710 Karlskirche Wien September 2016.jpg|
Karlskirche,
Vienna,
Austria, by
Johann Bernhard Fischer von Erlach, 1715-1737 100130 150006 Dresden Frauenkirche winter blue sky-2.jpg|
Frauenkirche,
Dresden,
Germany, by
George Bähr, 1726–1743 Residenz Wuerzburg Vorderan.jpg|The
Würzburg Residence,
Würzburg,
Germany, by
Balthasar Neumann, 1744–1780 The Baroque emerged from the
Counter Reformation as an attempt by the
Catholic Church in Rome to convey its power and to emphasize the magnificence of God. The Baroque and its late variant the
Rococo were the first truly global styles in the arts. Dominating more than two centuries of art and architecture in Europe, Latin America and beyond from circa 1580 to circa 1800. Born in the painting studios of
Bologna and
Rome in the 1580s and 1590s, and in Roman sculptural and architectural ateliers in the second and third decades of the 17th century, the Baroque spread swiftly throughout
Italy,
Spain and
Portugal, Flanders,
France, the Netherlands, England, Scandinavia, and Russia, as well as to central and eastern European centres from
Munich (Germany) to
Vilnius (
Lithuania). The
Portuguese,
Spanish and
French empires and the Dutch treading network had a leading role in spreading the two styles into the Americas and colonial Africa and Asia, to places such as
Lima,
Mozambique,
Goa and the
Philippines. Due to its spread in regions with different architectural traditions, multiple kinds of Baroque appeared based on location, different in some aspects, but similar overall. For example, French Baroque appeared severe and detached by comparison, preempting
Neoclassicism and the architecture of the
Age of Enlightenment. Hybrid Native American/European Baroque architecture first appeared in South America (as opposed to Mexico) in the late 17th century, after the indigenous symbols and styles that characterize this unusual variant of Baroque had been kept alive over the preceding century in other media, a very good example of this being the
Jesuit Church in
Arequipa (Peru). The first Baroque buildings were cathedrals, churches and monasteries, soon joined by civic buildings, mansions, and palaces. Being characterized by dynamism, for the first time walls, façades and interiors curved, a good example being
San Carlo alle Quattro Fontane in Rome. Baroque architects took the basic elements of
Renaissance architecture, including domes and colonnades, and made them higher, grander, more decorated, and more dramatic. The interior effects were often achieved with the use of
quadratura, or ''
trompe-l'œil'' painting combined with sculpture: the eye is drawn upward, giving the illusion that one is looking into the heavens. Clusters of sculpted angels and painted figures crowd the ceiling. Light was also used for dramatic effect; it streamed down from cupolas and was reflected from an abundance of gilding.
Solomonic columns were often used, to give an illusion of upwards motion and other decorative elements occupied every available space. In Baroque palaces, grand stairways became a central element. Besides architecture, Baroque painting and sculpture are characterized by dynamism too. This is in contrast with how static and peaceful
Renaissance art is. Besides the building itself, the space where it was placed had a role too. Both Baroque and Rococo buildings try to seize viewers' attention and to dominate their surroundings, whether on a small scale such as the
San Carlo alle Quattro Fontane in Rome, or on a massive one, like the new facade of the
Santiago de Compostela Cathedral, designed to tower over the city. A manifestation of power and authority on the grandest scale, Baroque urban planning and renewal was promoted by the church and the state alike. It was the first era since antiquity to experience mass migration into cities, and urban planners took idealistic measures to regulate them. The most notable early example was
Domenico Fontana's restructuring of Rome's street plan of
Pope Sixtus V. Architects had experimented with idealized city schemes since the early Renaissance, examples being
Leon Battista Alberti (1404–1472) planning a centralized model city, with streets leading to a central piazza, or
Filarete (Antonio di Pietro Aver(u)lino, -) designing a round city named
Sforzinda (1451–1456) that he based on parts of the human body in the idea that a healthy city should reflect the physiognomy of its inhabitants. However, none of these idealistic cities has ever been built. In fact, few such projects were put into practice in Europe as new cities were prohibitively costly and existing urban areas, with existing churches and palaces, could not be demolished. Only in the Americas, where architects often had a clean space to work with, were such cities possible, as in
Lima (Peru) or
Buenos Aires (
Argentina). The earliest Baroque ideal city is
Zamość, built north-east of
Kraków (Poland) by the Italian architect
Bernardo Morando (-1600), being a centralized town focusing on a square with radiating streets. Where entire cities could not be rebuilt, patrons and architects compensated by creating spacious and symmetrical squares, often with avenues and radiating out at perpendicular angles and focusing on a fountain, statue or
obelisk. A good example of this is the
Place des Vosges (formerly Place Royale), commissioned by
Henry IV probably after plans by
Baptiste du Cerceau (1545–1590). The most famous Baroque space in the world is
Gianlorenzo Bernini's
St. Peter's Square in Rome. Similar with ideal urban planning,
Baroque gardens are characterized by straight and readapting avenues, with geometric spaces.
Rococo Dresden-Zwinger-Wallpavillion-gp.jpg|
Zwinger,
Dresden, Germany, by
Matthäus Daniel Pöppelmann, 1719 Porte de l'hôtel de Chenizot.jpg|Door of the , Paris, by , 1719 File:Salon ovale de la princesse in the Hôtel de Soubise (11).jpg|The ceiling of the oval Salon of the Princesse in
Hôtel de Soubise, Paris, by
Germain Boffrand, 1740 Facade of the Christian VII's Palæ.jpg|
Amalienborg,
Copenhagen, Denmark, by
Nicolai Eigtved, 1750-1754 Palais royal de Queluz - Vue générale.jpg|
Palace of Queluz,
Lisbon, Portugal, by
Mateus Vicente de Oliveira, 1752 Wieskirche, Gemeinde Steingaden Ortsteil Wies.JPG|
Pilgrimage Church of Wies,
Steingaden, Germany, by
Dominikus and
Johann Baptist Zimmermann, 1754 The name
Rococo derives from the French word
rocaille, which describes shell-covered rock-work, and
coquille, meaning seashell. Rococo architecture is fancy and fluid, accentuating asymmetry, with an abundant use of curves, scrolls, gilding and ornaments. The style enjoyed great popularity with the ruling elite of Europe during the first half of the 18th century. It developed in France out of a new fashion in interior decoration, and spread across Europe. Domestic Rococo abandoned Baroque's high moral tone, its weighty allegories and its obsession with legitimacy: in fact, its abstract forms and carefree, pastoral subjects related more to notions of refuge and joy that created a more forgiving atmosphere for polite conversations. Rococo rooms are typically smaller than their Baroque counterparts, reflecting a movement towards domestic intimacy. Even the grander salons used for entertaining were more modest in scale, as social events involved smaller numbers of guests. Characteristic of the style were Rocaille motifs derived from the shells, icicles and rock-work or grotto decoration. Rocaille arabesques were mostly abstract forms, laid out symmetrically over and around architectural frames. A favourite motif was the scallop shell, whose top scrolls echoed the basic S and C framework scrolls of the
arabesques and whose sinuous ridges echoed the general curvilinearity of the room decoration. While few Rococo exteriors were built in France, a number of Rococo churches are found in southern Germany. Other widely-user motifs in decorative arts and interior architecture include:
acanthus and other leaves, birds, bouquets of flowers, fruits, elements associated with love (
putti, quivers with arrows ans arrowed hearts),
trophies of arms, medallions with faces, many many flowers, and
Far Eastern elements (
pagodes, dragons, monkeys, bizarre flowers, bamboo, and Chinese people). Pastel colours were widely used, like light blue, mint green or pink. Rococo designers also loved mirrors (the more the better), an example being the Hall of Mirrors of the
Amalienburg (
Munich, Germany), by
Johann Baptist Zimmermann. Generally, mirrors are also featured above fireplaces.
Exoticism Chinese House Potsdam-, Germany.jpg|Chinese inspiration/
Chinoiserie -
Chinese House,
Sanssouci Park,
Potsdam, Germany, by
Johann Gottfried Büring, 1755-1764 Stockholm Sweden Royal-Domain-of Drottningholm Drottningholms-Kina-Slott-01.jpg|Chinese inspiration/Chinoiserie -
Chinese Pavilion,
Ekerö, Sweden, by Carl Fredrik Adelcrantz, 1763–1769 MoscheeSchwetzingen Panorama quad-mj.jpg|Islamic inspiration - Garden Mosque of the
Schwetzingen Palace, Germany, by
Nicolas de Pigage, 1779-1795 Haga Park March 2015 01.jpg|Islamic inspiration - Turkish Tent,
Hagaparken,
Stockholm, Sweden, by
Louis Jean Desprez, 1787 The Royal Pavilion Brighton UK.jpg|Islamic inspiration -
Royal Pavilion,
Brighton, UK, by
John Nash, 1787-1823 Hôtel de Beauharnais.jpg|Egyptian inspiration/
Egyptian Revival - portico of the
Hôtel Beauharnais, Paris, Laurent-Edmé Bataille, 1804 Egyptian Building, Richmond, VA.jpg|Egyptian inspiration/Egyptian Revival -
Egyptian Building, part of the
Virginia Commonwealth University,
Richmond, Virginia, USA, by Thomas Stewart, 1845 File:Facade, Mayan Theater, Los Angeles.jpg|Pre-Columbian inspiration/
Mayan Revival - facade detail of the
Mayan Theater,
Los Angeles, USA, by
Stiles O. Clements, 1927 Paris 10e Cinéma Le Louxor 965.jpg|Egyptian inspiration/mix of Egyptian Revival and Art Deco - , Paris, by Henri Zipcy, 1919-1921 450 Sutter St. lobby 1.JPG|Pre-Columbian inspiration/mix of Mayan Revival and Art Deco - Interior detail of
450 Sutter Street,
San Francisco, California, by
Timothy L. Pflueger, 1929 The interactions between East and West brought on by colonialist exploration have had an impact on aesthetics. Because of being something rare and new to Westerners, some non-European styles were really appreciated during the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries. Some nobles and kings built little structures inspired by these styles in the gardens of their palaces, or fully decorated a handful of rooms of palaces like this. Because of not fully understanding the origins and principles that govern these exotic aesthetics, Europeans sometimes created hybrids of the style which they tried to replicate and which were the trends at that time. A good example of this is
chinoiserie, a Western decorative style, popular during the 18th century, that was heavily inspired by Chinese arts, but also by Rococo at the same time. Because traveling to China or other Far Eastern countries was something hard at that time and so remained mysterious to most Westerners, European imagination were fuelled by perceptions of Asia as a place of wealth and luxury, and consequently patrons from emperors to merchants vied with each other in adorning their living quarters with Asian goods and decorating them in Asian styles. Where Asian objects were hard to obtain, European craftsmen and painters stepped up to fill the demand, creating a blend of Rococo forms and Asian figures, motifs and techniques. Chinese art was not the only foreign style with which Europeans experimented. Another was the
Islamic one. Examples of this include the Garden Mosque of the
Schwetzingen Palace in Germany (the only surviving example of an 18th-century European garden mosque), the
Royal Pavilion in
Brighton, or the
Moorish Revival buildings from the 19th and early 20th centuries, with horseshoe arches and brick patterns. When it come to the Orient, Europeans also had an interest for the culture of Ancient Egypt. Compared to other cases of exoticism, the one with the land of
pharaohs is the oldest one, since
Ancient Greeks and
Romans had this interest during Antiquity. The main periods when
Egyptian Revival monuments were erected were the early 19th century, with Napoleon's military campaigns in Egypt, and the 1920s, when the
Tomb of Tutankhamun was discovered in 1922, which caused an
Egyptomania that lead to
Art Deco sometimes using motifs inspired by Ancient Egypt. During the late 18th and early 19th century,
Neoclassicism sometimes mixed Greco-Roman elements with Egyptian ones. Because of its association with
pharaohs,
death and
eternity, multiple Egyptian Revival tombs or cemetery entry gates were built in this style. Besides mortuary structures, other buildings in this style include certain
synagogues, like the
Karlsruhe Synagogue or some
Empire monuments built during the reign of
Napoleon, such as the Egyptian
portico of the
Hôtel Beauharnais or the
Fontaine du Fellah. During the 1920s and 1930s,
Pre-Columbian Mesoamerican architecture was of great interest for some American architects, particularly what the
Mayans built. Several of
Frank Lloyd Wright's California houses were erected in a Mayan Revival style, while other architects combined Mayan motifs with Art Deco ones.
Neoclassicism Stourhead Bridge A.jpg|
English landscape garden at
Stourhead, UK, by
Henry Hoare, the 1740s Pantheon 1, Paris May 11, 2013.jpg|
Panthéon, Paris, by
Jacques-Germain Soufflot and
Jean-Baptiste Rondelet, 1758–1790 West facade of Petit Trianon 002.JPG|
Petit Trianon,
Versailles, France, by
Ange-Jacques Gabriel, 1764 The Petit Trianon (23935245609).jpg|Staircase of the Petit Trianon, by Ange-Jacques Gabriel, 1764 Bordeaux Grand Théâtre R03.jpg|Stairway of the
Grand Theater of Bordeaux,
Bordeaux, France, by
Victor Louis, 1777-1780 Osterley House, entrance hall.jpg|The Hall,
Osterley Park, London, by
Robert Adam, 1767 Cabinet dore Marie-Antoinette Versailles.jpg|Cabinet Doré of
Marie-Antoinette in the
Palace of Versailles, 1783, by the Rousseau brothers File:Villa Welgelegen with Laocoön and His Sons.JPG|
Villa Welgelegen,
Haarlem, Netherlands, by
Abraham van der Hart, 1789 Brandenburger Tor abends.jpg|
Brandenburg Gate, in Berlin, Germany, by
Carl Gotthard Langhans, 1791 Château de Malmaison, France (48029730202).jpg|
Empress Joséphine's Bedroom in
Château de Malmaison,
Rueil-Malmaison, France, by
Charles Percier and
Pierre-François-Léonard Fontaine, 1800-1802 File:Parc et Château de Rambouillet (50029592691).jpg|Napoleon's bath of the
Château de Rambouillet,
Rambouillet, France, painted by Godard and Jean Vasserot, 1806 150214 Neue Wache Berlin.jpg|
Neue Wache, Berlin, by
Karl Friedrich Schinkel and
Salomo Sachs, 1816 File:2021-07-19 Schloßbrücke 03.jpg|
Cast iron railing detail of the
Schlossbrücke, Berlin, by Karl Friedrich Schinkel, designed in 1819 and produced in 1824 Burns Monument (43281676364).jpg|
Burns Monument,
Edinburgh, UK, by
Thomas Hamilton, 1820-1831 Neoclassical architecture focused on
Ancient Greek and
Roman details, plain, white walls and grandeur of scale. Compared to the previous styles, Baroque and Rococo, Neoclassical exteriors tended to be more minimalist, featuring straight and angular lines, but being still ornamented. The style's clean lines and sense of balance and proportion worked well for grand buildings (such as the
Panthéon in Paris) and for smaller structures alike (such as the
Petit Trianon). Excavations during the 18th century at
Pompeii and
Herculaneum, which had both been buried under volcanic ash during the 79 AD eruption of
Mount Vesuvius, inspired a return to order and rationality, largely thanks to the writings of
Johann Joachim Winckelmann. In the mid-18th century,
antiquity was upheld as a standard for architecture as never before. Neoclassicism was a fundamental investigation of the very bases of architectural form and meaning. In the 1750s, an alliance between archaeological exploration and architectural theory started, which will continue in the 19th century.
Marc-Antoine Laugier wrote in 1753 that 'Architecture owes all that is perfect to the
Greeks'. The style was adopted by progressive circles in other countries such as Sweden and Russia.
Federal-style architecture is the name for the classicizing architecture built in
North America between c. 1780 and 1830, and particularly from 1785 to 1815. This style shares its name with its era, the
Federal Period. The term is also used in association with furniture design in the United States of the same time period. The style broadly corresponds to the middle-class classicism of
Biedermeier style in the German-speaking lands,
Regency style in Britain and to the French
Empire style. In Central and Eastern Europe, the style is usually referred to as
Classicism (, ), while the newer
Revival styles of the 19th century until today are called neoclassical.
Étienne-Louis Boullée (1728–1799) was a visionary architect of the period. His
utopian projects, never built, included a monument to
Isaac Newton (1784) in the form of an immense dome, with an
oculus allowing the light to enter, giving the impression of a sky full of stars. His
project for an enlargement of the Royal Library (1785) was even more dramatic, with a gigantic arch sheltering the collection of books. While none of his projects were ever built, the images were widely published and inspired architects of the period to look outside the traditional forms. Similarly with the Renaissance and Baroque periods, during the Neoclassical one urban theories of how a good city should be appeared too.
Enlightenment writers of the 18th century decried the problems of Paris at that time, the biggest one being the big number of narrow medieval streets crowded with modest houses.
Voltaire openly criticized the failure of the French Royal administration to initiate public works, improve the quality of life in towns, and stimulate the economy. 'It is time for those who rule the most opulent capital in Europe to make it the most comfortable and the most magnificent of cities. There must be public markets, fountains which actually provide water and regular pavements. The narrow and infected streets must be widened, monuments that cannot be seen must be revealed and new ones built for all to see', Voltaire insisted in a polemical essay on 'The Embellishments of Paris' in 1749. In the same year,
Étienne La Font de Saint-Yenne, criticized how
Louis XIV's great
east façade of the Louvre, was all but hidden from views by a dense quarter of modest houses. Voltaire also said that in order to transform Paris into a city that could rival ancient Rome, it was necessary to demolish more than it was to build. 'Our towns are still what they were, a mass of houses crowded together haphazardly without system, planning or design',
Marc-Antoine Laugier complained in 1753. Writing a decade later,
Pierre Patte promoted an urban reform in quest of health, social order, and security, launching at the same time a medical and organic metaphor which compared the operations of urban design to those of the surgeons. With bad air and lack of fresh water its current state was pathological, Patte asserted, calling for fountains to be placed at principal intersections and markets. Squares are recommended promote the circulation of air, and for the same reason houses on the city's bridges should be demolished. He also criticized the location of hospitals next to markets and protested continued burials in overcrowded city churchyards. Besides cities, new ideas of how a garden should be appeared in 18th century England, making place for the
English landscape garden (aka ''jardin à l'anglaise
), characterized by an idealized view of nature, and the use of Greco-Roman or Gothic ruins, bridges, and other picturesque architecture, designed to recreate an idyllic pastoral landscape. It was the opposite of the symmetrical and geometrically planned Baroque garden (aka jardin à la française'').
Revivalism and Eclecticism File:Moscow July 2011-7a.jpg|
Russian Revival -
Cathedral of Christ the Saviour,
Moscow, Russia, 1839–1860, destroyed in 1931 and rebuilt in 1995–2000 All Saints Margaret Street Interior 2, London, UK - Diliff.jpg|
Gothic Revival - Interior of the
All Saints, London, by
William Butterfield, 1850–1859 Saint Augustin Church Paris.jpg|
Eclectic - The
Église Saint-Augustin de Paris, by
Victor Baltard, 1860–1868 Chhatrapati_Shivaji_Terminus_%28Victoria_Terminus%29.jpg|
Indo-Saracenic - The
Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj Terminus, previously Victoria Terminus, a mixture of
Romanesque,
Gothic and
Mughal elements
Mumbai,
Maharashtra, by
Frederick William Stevens 1878–1888 File:Cathedral Saint Alexander Nevsky (23997180108).jpg|
Byzantine Revival -
Alexander Nevsky Cathedral,
Sofia, Bulgaria, by
Alexander Pomerantsev, 1882–1912 Belfast City Hall 2.jpg|
Neo-Baroque -
Belfast City Hall,
Belfast, UK, by
Brumwell Thomas, 1898–1906 Beaney Institute 002.jpg|
Tudor Revival architecture - The
Beaney House of Art and Knowledge,
Canterbury, England, by A.H. Campbell, 1899 Immeuble rue La Boétie, rue de Miromesnil, Paris 8e.jpg|
Rococo Revival - Apartment building no. 8 on Rue de Miromesnil, Paris, by P. Lobrot, 1900 Place Beauvau (731).jpg|Louis XVI Revival - Apartment building no. 2 on Rue de Miromesnil, Paris, unknown architect, 1900 File:La haye palais paix jardin face.JPG|
Renaissance Revival -
Peace Palace,
The Hague, Netherlands, by
Louis Marie Cordonnier, 1907 56, Bulevardul Dacia, Bucharest (Romania).jpg|
Romanian Revival - The C.N. Câmpeanu House on Bulevardul Dacia,
Bucharest, Romania, , by Constantin Nănescu Ankara asv2021-10 img23 Ziraat Bank Museum.jpg|
First national movement -
Ziraat Bank Museum,
Ankara, Turkey, 1929, by
Giulio Mongeri 12 Strada Armenească, Bucharest (03).jpg|
Mediterranean Revival - General Mandiros Ciomac and Simion Ciomac Building (Strada Armenească no. 12), Bucharest, by Ion Giurgea, 1938 The 19th century was dominated by a wide variety of stylistic revivals, variations, and interpretations.
Revivalism in
architecture is the use of visual styles that consciously echo the style of a
previous architectural era. Modern-day Revival styles can be summarized within
New Classical architecture, and sometimes under the umbrella term traditional architecture. The idea that architecture might represent the glory of kingdoms can be traced to the dawn of civilisation, but the notion that architecture can bear the stamp of national character is a modern idea, that appeared in the 18th century historical thinking and given political currency in the wake of the
French Revolution. As the map of Europe was repeatedly changing, architecture was used to grant the aura of a glorious past to even the most recent nations. In addition to the credo of universal Classicism, two new, and often contradictory, attitudes on historical styles existed in the early 19th century. Pluralism promoted the simultaneous use of the expanded range of style, while Revivalism held that a single historical model was appropriate for modern architecture. Associations between styles and building types appeared, for example:
Egyptian for prisons,
Gothic for churches, or
Renaissance Revival for banks and exchanges. These choices were the result of other associations: the
pharaohs with
death and
eternity, the
Middle Ages with
Christianity, or the
Medici family with the rise of banking and modern commerce. , near
Plymouth (UK), by
John Foulston, 1820s, including an '
Egyptian' library, a 'Hindoo' nonconformist chapel, a 'primitive
Doric' town hall, and a street of houses with a
Roman Corinthian order Whether their choice was
Classical, medieval, or
Renaissance, all revivalists shared the strategy of advocating a particular style based on national history, one of the great enterprises of historians in the early 19th century. Only one historic period was claimed to be the only one capable of providing models grounded in national traditions, institutions, or values. Issues of style became matters of state. The most well-known Revivalist style is the
Gothic Revival one, that appeared in the mid-18th century in the houses of a number of wealthy antiquarians in England, a notable example being the
Strawberry Hill House. German
Romantic writers and architects were the first to promote Gothic as a powerful expression of national character, and in turn use it as a symbol of national identity in territories still divided.
Johann Gottfried Herder posed the question 'Why should we always imitate foreigners, as if we were Greeks or Romans?'. In art and architecture history, the term
Orientalism refers to the works of the Western artists who specialized in Oriental subjects, produced from their travels in
Western Asia, during the 19th century. In that time, artists and scholars were described as Orientalists, especially in France. In India, during the
British Raj, a new style,
Indo-Saracenic, (also known as
Indo-Gothic,
Mughal-Gothic,
Neo-Mughal, or
Hindoo style) was getting developed, which incorporated varying degrees of Indian elements into the Western European style. The
Churches and convents of Goa are another example of the blending of traditional Indian styles with western European architectural styles. Most Indo-Saracenic public buildings were constructed between 1858 and 1947, with the peaking at 1880. The style has been described as "part of a 19th-century movement to project themselves as the natural successors of the Mughals". They were often built for modern functions such as transport stations, government offices, and law courts. It is much more evident in British power centres in the subcontinent like
Mumbai,
Chennai, and
Kolkata.
Beaux-Arts Paris Palais Garnier 2010-04-06 16.55.07.jpg|Exterior of the
Palais Garnier, Paris, by
Charles Garnier, 1860–1875 Opera Garnier Grand Escalier.jpg|Grand stairs of the Palais Garnier, by
Charles Garnier, 1860–1875 Palacio CEC, Bucarest, Rumanía, 2016-05-29, DD 91-93 HDR.jpg|The
CEC Palace on
Victory Avenue,
Bucharest, Romania, by , 1897-1900 The Cantacuzino Palace from Bucharest (Romania).jpg|
Cantacuzino Palace, Bucharest, by , 1898-1906 Petit-Palais-Paris-02-2018.jpg|
Petit Palais, Paris, by
Charles Giraud, 1900 Building at the intersection of Calea Victoriei with Strada Franklin, Bucharest, circa 1900, by Leonida Negrescu.jpg|Anker Building, Bucharest, by , 1900 Image-Grand central Station Outside Night 2.jpg|
Grand Central Terminal, New York City, by
Reed and Stem and
Warren and Wetmore, 1903 29 avenue Bugeaud Paris.jpg|Hôtel Roxoroid de Belfort, Paris, 1911, by Della Faillelaan 23, Antwerpen.jpg|Villa,
Antwerp, Belgium, by , 1913 The Beaux-Arts style takes its name from the
École des Beaux-Arts in Paris, where it developed and where many of the main exponents of the style studied. Due to the fact that international students studied here, there are buildings from the second half of the 19th century and the early 20th century of this type all over the world, designed by architects like
Charles Girault,
Thomas Hastings, or
Petre Antonescu. Today, from
Bucharest to
Buenos Aires and from
San Francisco to
Brussels, the Beaux-Arts style survives in opera houses, civic structures, university campuses commemorative monuments, luxury hotels and townhouses. The style was heavily influenced by the
Paris Opéra House (1860–1875), designed by
Charles Garnier, the masterpiece of the 19th century
renovation of Paris, dominating its entire neighbourhood and continuing to astonish visitors with its majestic staircase and reception halls. The Opéra was an aesthetic and societal turning point in French architecture. Here, Garnier showed what he called a
style actuel, which was influenced by the spirit of the time, aka
Zeitgeist, and reflected the designer's personal taste. Beaux-Arts façades were usually imbricated, or layered with overlapping classical elements or sculpture. Often façades consisted of a high rusticated basement level, after it a few floors high level, usually decorated with pilasters or columns, and at the top an attic level and/or the roof. Beaux-Arts architects were often commissioned to design monumental civic buildings symbolic of the self-confidence of the town or city. The style aimed for a
Baroque opulence through lavishly decorated monumental structures that evoked
Louis XIV's
Versailles. However, it was not just a revival of the Baroque, being more of a synthesis of Classicist styles, like
Renaissance, Baroque,
Rococo,
Neoclassicism etc.
Industry and new technologies Les Halles, Paris, by Victor Baltard, 1852-1855.jpg|
Les Halles, Paris, by
Victor Baltard, 1852-1855 Crystal.Palace.Paxton.Plan.jpg|Plan and elevation for
the Crystal Palace, London, by
Joseph Paxton, 1854 File:De Binnen Amstel gezien naar het in 1866 gedempte Amstelgrachtje, thans Maarten Jansz Kosterstraat, en het Paleis voor Volksvlijt op het Frederiksplein.jpg|
Paleis voor Volksvlijt,
Amsterdam, Netherlands, by , 1859–1964 Le Bon Marché, 001.jpg|
Le Bon Marché, Paris, by
Louis-Charles Boileau in collaboration with the engineering firm of
Gustave Eiffel, 1872 Bradbury Atrium.jpg|Interior of the
Bradbury Building, with its exposed staircases and free-standing hydraulic elevators,
Los Angeles, USA, by
George Herbert Wyman, 1889-1893 Warenhaus Tietz Leipziger Str. 1900.jpg|Tietz Department Store, with its huge shop windows running through all the floors, Berlin, Germany, by
Bernhard Sehring and L.Lachmann, 1899-1900 Because of the
Industrial Revolution and the new technologies it brought, new types of buildings appeared. By 1850 iron was quite present in daily life at every scale, from mass-produced decorative architectural details and objects of apartment buildings and commercial buildings to train sheds. A well-known 19th century glass and iron building is
the Crystal Palace from
Hyde Park (London), built in 1851 to house the
Great Exhibition, having an appearance similar to a greenhouse. Its scale was daunting. The marketplace pioneered novel uses of iron and glass to create an architecture of display and consumption that made the temporary display of the world fairs a permanent feature of modern urban life. Just after a year after the Crystal Palace was dismantaled,
Aristide Boucicaut opened what historians of mass consumption have labelled the first
department store,
Le Bon Marché in Paris. As the store expanded, its exterior took on the form of a public monument, being highly decorated with French
Renaissance Revival motifs. The entrances advanced subtly onto the pavemenet, hoping to captivate the attention of potential customers. Between 1872 and 1874, the interior was remodelled by
Louis-Charles Boileau, in collaboration with the young engineering firm of
Gustave Eiffel. In place of the open courtyard required to permit more daylight into the interior, the new building focused around three skylight atria.
Art Nouveau Tassel House stairway.JPG|
Hôtel Tassel,
Brussels, Belgium, by
Victor Horta, 1894 File:Castel Béranger, February 16, 2013.jpg|Entrance of the
Castel Béranger, Paris, by
Hector Guimard, 1895–1898 Wien, Friedrichstraße 12, Secession-20160621-011.jpg|
Secession Building,
Vienna, Austria, by
Joseph Maria Olbrich, 1897 FMarbeuf.jpg|
La Fermette Marbeuf, Paris, by
Émile Hurtré, 1898 La colonie dartistes jugendstil (Mathildenhöhe, Darmstadt) (7882268852).jpg|Ernst Ludwig House in
Darmstadt Artists' Colony,
Darmstadt,
Germany, by
Joseph Maria Olbrich (1900) Paris Metro 2 Porte Dauphine Libellule.JPG|The
Porte Dauphine Métro Station, Paris, by
Hector Guimard, 1900 Maison Huot de style art nouveau (Nancy) (7966479700).jpg|
Maison Huot,
Nancy, France, by
Émile André, 1903 File:Casa Batllo Overview Barcelona Spain cut.jpg|
Casa Batlló,
Barcelona, Spain, by
Antoni Gaudí, 1904–1906 Popular in many countries from the early 1890s until the outbreak of World War I in 1914, Art Nouveau was an influential although relatively brief art and design movement and philosophy. Despite being a short-lived fashion, it paved the way for the
modern architecture of the 20th century. Between 1870 and 1900, a crisis of historicism occurred, during which the historicist culture was critiqued, one of the voices being
Friedrich Nietzsche in 1874, who diagnosed 'a malignant historical fervour' as one of the crippling symptoms of a modern culture burdened by archaeological study and faith in the laws of historical progression. Focusing on natural forms, asymmetry, sinuous lines and whiplash curves, architects and designers aimed to escape the excessively ornamental styles and historical replications, popular during the 19th century. However, the style was not completely new, since Art Nouveau artists drew on a huge range of influences, particularly
Beaux-Arts architecture, the
Arts and Crafts movement,
aestheticism and
Japanese art. Buildings used materials associated in the 19th century with modernity, such as cast-iron and glass. A good example of this is the Paris Metro entrance at
Porte Dauphine by
Hector Guimard (1900). Its cast-iron and glass canopy is as much sculpture as it is architecture. In Paris, Art Nouveau was even called Le Style Métro by some. The interest for stylized organic forms of ornamentation originated in the mid 19th century, when it was promoted in
The Grammar of Ornament (1854), a pattern book by British architect
Owen Jones (architect) (1809–1874).
Whiplash curves and sinuous organic lines are its most familiar hallmarks, however the style can not be summarized only to them, since its forms are much more varied and complex. The movement displayed many national interpretations. Depending on where it manifested, it was inspired by
Celtic art,
Gothic Revival,
Rococo Revival, and
Baroque Revival. In Hungary, Romania and Poland, for example, Art Nouveau incorporated folkloric elements. This is true especially in Romania, because it facilitated the appearance of the
Romanian Revival style, which draws inspiration from
Brâncovenesc architecture and traditional peasant houses and objects. The style also had different names, depending on countries. In Britain it was known as
Modern Style, in the Netherlands as
Nieuwe Kunst, in Germany and Austria as
Jugendstil, in Italy as
Liberty style, in
Catalonia as
Modernisme, in Romania as
Arta 1900, and in Japan as
Shiro-Uma. It would be wrong to credit any particular place as the only one where the movement appeared, since it seems to have arisen in multiple locations.
Modern Berlin AEG Turbinenfabrik.jpg|
AEG turbine factory, Berlin, Germany, by
Peter Behrens, 1909 Casa Steiner - Foto Fachada Trasera.jpg|Steiner House,
Vienna, Austria, by
Adolf Loos, 1910 Fagus Gropius Hauptgebaeude 200705 wiki front.jpg|
Fagus Factory,
Alfeld, Germany, by
Walter Gropius, 1911 VT16_PD_zahrada.jpg|
Villa Tugendhat,
Brno, Czech Republic, by
Ludwig Mies van der Rohe and
Lilly Reich, 1930 Rejecting ornament and embracing minimalism and modern materials, Modernist architecture appeared across the world in the early 20th century.
Art Nouveau paved the way for it, promoting the idea of non-historicist styles. It developed initially in Europe, focusing on functionalism and the avoidance of decoration. Modernism reached its peak during the 1930s and 1940s with the
Bauhaus and the
International Style, both characterised by asymmetry, flat roofs, large ribbon windows, metal, glass, white rendering and open-plan interiors.
Art Deco The boudoir of fashion designer Jeanne Lanvin, now in the Museum of Decorative Arts in Paris.png|The boudoir of fashion designer
Jeanne Lanvin (now in the
Museum of Decorative Arts, Paris), by
Armand-Albert Rateau, 1920-1922 Edgar brandt, porte da ascensore in ferro, vetro e bronzo, francia 1926 01.jpg|Elevator doors, now in the
Calouste Gulbenkian Museum,
Lisbon, Portugal, by
Edgar Brandt, 1926 La samaritaine as seen from the Pont Neuf.jpg|
La Samaritaine, Paris, by
Henri Sauvage, 1926–1928 28 Bulevardul Lascăr Catargiu, Bucharest (01).jpg|Door of
Bulevardul Lascăr Catargiu no. 28,
Bucharest, Romania, unknown architect, 1930 Chrysler Building spire, Manhattan, by Carol Highsmith (LOC highsm.04444).png|
Chrysler Building, New York City, by
William Van Allen, 1930 Biarritz - Musée de la mer (edited).jpg|
Musée de la Mer,
Biarritz, France, by
Joseph Hiriart, 1933 Art Deco, named retrospectively after an exhibition held in Paris in 1925, originated in France as a luxurious, highly decorated style. It then spread quickly throughout the world - most dramatically in the United States - becoming more
streamlined and modernistic through the 1930s. The style was pervasive and popular, finding its way into the design of everything from jewellery to film sets, from the interiors of ordinary homes to cinemas, luxury streamliners and hotels. Its exuberance and fantasy captured the spirit of the 'roaring 20s' and provided an escape from the realities of the
Great Depression during the 1930s. Although it ended with the start of World War II, its appeal has endured. Despite that it is an example of modern architecture, elements of the style drew on
ancient Egyptian,
Greek,
Roman,
African,
Aztec and
Japanese influences, but also on
Futurism,
Cubism and the
Bauhaus. Bold colours were often applied on low-reliefs. Predominant materials include
chrome plating,
brass, polished
steel and
aluminium, inlaid wood, stone and stained glass.
International Style The Barcelona Pavilion, Barcelona, 2010.jpg|
Barcelona Pavilion,
Barcelona, Spain, by
Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, 1929 VillaSavoye.jpg|
Villa Savoye,
Poissy, France, by
Le Corbusier, 1929-1930 Lever House 390 Park Avenue.jpg|
Lever House, New York City, by
Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, 1952 NewYorkSeagram 04.30.2008.JPG|
Seagram Building, New York City, by Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, 1958 The International Style emerged in Europe after World War I, influenced by recent movements, including
De Stijl and
Streamline Moderne, and had a close relationship to the
Bauhaus. The antithesis of nearly every other architectural movement that preceded it, the International Style eliminated extraneous ornament and used modern industrial materials such as steel, glass, reinforced concrete and
chrome plating. Rectilinear, flat-roofed, asymmetrical and white, it became a symbol of modernity across the world. It seemed to offer a crisp, clean, rational future after the horrors of war. Named by the architect
Philip Johnson and historian
Henry-Russell Hitchcock (1903–1987) in 1932, the movement was epitomized by
Charles-Edouard Jeanneret, or
Le Corbusier and was clearly expressed in his statement that 'a house is a machine for living in'.
Brutalist File:2009-0522-MN-SJU-abbeychurch.jpg|
Saint John's Abbey,
Collegeville, US, by
Marcel Breuer, 1961 File:KZ-Jasenovac-Denkmal-Seitenansicht.JPG|
Flower Monument, Jasenovac Memorial Site,
Jasenovac,
Sisak-Moslavina,
Croatia, by
Bogdan Bogdanović, 1965 File:Banco de Guatemala desde Palacio Municipal.jpg|Bank of Guatemala,
Guatemala City,
Guatemala, by
Raúl Minondo Herrera and
Jorge Montes Córdova, 1966 File:Panorama vecinal.jpg|
Bank of London and South America Headquarters,
Buenos Aires,
Argentina, by
Clorindo Testa, 1966 Montreal - QC - Habitat67 2.jpg|
Habitat 67,
Montreal, Canada, by
Moshe Safdie, 1966–1967 Geisel Library 3 2013-08-08.jpg|
Geisel Library,
San Diego, California, US, by
William Pereira, 1970 Robarts Library-2.jpg|
Robarts Library,
Toronto, Canada, by Mathers & Halden Architects, 1973 Seattle Freeway Park 24.jpg|
Freeway Park Fountain,
Seattle,
Washington, US, by
Lawrence Halprin, 1976 Supposedly based on social equality, Brutalism was inspired by
Le Corbusier's 1947-1952
Unité d'habitation in
Marseille. It seems the term was originally coined by Swedish architect
Hans Asplund (1921–1994), but Le Corbusier's use of the description
béton brut, meaning raw concrete, for his choice of material for the Unité d'habitation was particularly influential. The style flourished from the 1950s to the mid-1970s, mainly using concrete, which although new in itself, was unconventional when exposed on facades. Before Brutalism, concrete was usually hidden beneath other materials.
Postmodern File:PiazzaDItalia1990.jpg|
Piazza d'Italia,
New Orleans, USA, by
Charles Moore, 1978 File:Stuttgart - Neue Staatsgalerie (35736927202).jpg|
Neue Staatsgalerie,
Stuttgart, Germany, by
James Stirling, 1984 File:Sony Building by David Shankbone crop.jpg|
AT&T Headquarters, New York City, by
Philip Johnson and
John Burgee, 1984 File:The Walt Disney Company office.jpg|
Team Disney Building,
Los Angeles, USA, by
Michael Graves, 1990 Pumping station, Stewart Street (geograph 4678320).jpg|
Isle of Dogs Pumping Station, London,
John Outram, 1988 File:Cambridge University Judge Business School interior.jpg|Multicolour interior of the
Cambridge Judge Business School,
Cambridge, UK, by
John Outram, 1995 A House For Essex - geograph.org.uk - 4471511.jpg|House for Essex,
Wrabness,
Essex, UK, by
FAT and
Grayson Perry, 2014 Not one definable style, Postmodernism is an eclectic mix of approaches that appeared in the late 20th century in reaction against Modernism, which was increasingly perceived as monotonous and conservative. As with many movements, a complete antithesis to Modernism developed. In 1966, the architect
Robert Venturi (1925–2018) had published his book,
Complexity and Contradiction in Architecture, which praised the originality and creativity of
Mannerist and
Baroque architecture of Rome, and encouraged more ambiguity and complexity in contemporary design. Complaining about the austerity and tedium of so many smooth steel and glass Modernist buildings, and in deliberate denunciation of the famous Modernist 'Less is more', Venturi stated 'Less is a bore'. His theories became a majore influence on the development of Postmodernism.
Deconstructivist Wexner Center for the Arts by Peter Eisenman.jpg|
Wexner Center for the Arts,
Ohio State University,
Columbus, Ohio, US, by
Peter Eisenman, 1989 Vitra Campus - Hadid Fire Station - full view, blue sky.jpg|
Vitra Fire Station,
Weil am Rhein, Germany, by
Zaha Hadid, 1989–1993 Jewish Museum Berlin - panoramio (3).jpg|
Jewish Museum, Berlin, Germany, by
Daniel Libeskind, 1992–1999 Bilbao - Guggenheim aurore.jpg|
Guggenheim Museum,
Bilbao, Spain, by
Frank Gehry, opened in 1997 5307 Wolfsburg.JPG|
Phaeno Science Center,
Wolfsburg, Germany, by Zaha Hadid, 2005 Deconstructivism in architecture is a development of
postmodern architecture that began in the late 1980s. It is characterized by ideas of fragmentation,
non-linear processes of design, an interest in manipulating ideas of a structure's surface or skin, and apparent
non-Euclidean geometry, (i.e., non-
rectilinear shapes) which serve to distort and dislocate some of the
elements of architecture, such as structure and
envelope. The finished visual appearance of buildings that exhibit the many deconstructivist "styles" is characterised by a stimulating unpredictability and a controlled chaos. Important events in the history of the Deconstructivist movement include the 1982
Parc de la Villette architectural design competition (especially the entry from the French philosopher
Jacques Derrida and the American architect
Peter Eisenman and
Bernard Tschumi's winning entry), the
Museum of Modern Art's 1988
Deconstructivist Architecture exhibition in New York, organized by
Philip Johnson and
Mark Wigley, and the 1989 opening of the
Wexner Center for the Arts in
Columbus, designed by Peter Eisenman. The New York exhibition featured works by
Frank Gehry,
Daniel Libeskind,
Rem Koolhaas,
Peter Eisenman,
Zaha Hadid,
Coop Himmelblau, and
Bernard Tschumi. Since the exhibition, many of the architects who were associated with Deconstructivism have distanced themselves from the term. Nonetheless, the term has stuck and has now, in fact, come to embrace a general trend within contemporary architecture.
Contemporary architecture ==See also==