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Europe 1300 - 1800
Course: Europe 1300 - 1800 > Unit 3
Lesson 2: Sculpture and architecture in central Italy- Brunelleschi & Ghiberti, the Sacrifice of Isaac
- Brunelleschi and Ghiberti, Sacrifice of Isaac (quiz)
- Ghiberti, "Gates of Paradise," east doors of the Florence Baptistery
- Brunelleschi, Old Sacristy
- Brunelleschi, Dome of the Cathedral of Florence.
- Brunelleschi, Dome (quiz)
- Brunelleschi, Pazzi Chapel
- Brunelleschi, Pazzi Chapel
- Brunelleschi, Santo Spirito
- Nanni di Banco, Four Crowned Saints
- Orsanmichele and Donatello's Saint Mark
- Donatello, Saint Mark
- Donatello, St. Mark (quiz)
- A soldier saint in Renaissance Florence: Donatello's St George
- Donatello, Feast of Herod
- Donatello, Madonna of the Clouds
- Donatello, David
- Donatello, David
- Donatello, David (quiz)
- Donatello, The Miracle of the Mule
- Donatello, Equestrian Monument of Gattamelata
- Donatello, Mary Magdalene
- Andrea della Robbia’s bambini at the Ospedale degli Innocenti, Florence
- Alberti, Palazzo Rucellai
- Alberti, Palazzo Rucellai
- Alberti, Palazzo Rucellai
- Alberti, Façade of Santa Maria Novella, Florence
- Alberti, Sant'Andrea in Mantua
- Michelozzo, Palazzo Medici
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Alberti, Palazzo Rucellai
The Palazzo Rucellai, designed by architect Alberti, showcases a revival of ancient Roman architecture in Florence. Inspired by Vitruvius's work, Alberti incorporated classical elements like pilasters, rounded arches, and entablatures. The palace emphasizes harmony and measure, reflecting the humanist movement and beautifying the city.
Want to join the conversation?
- The speakers make mention of the "three orders of architecture" "Tuscan, Ionic, and Corinthian" and how these are used in the structure...
I thought the most basic order was "Doric" though? What happened to that?(5 votes)- Tuscan is a Roman variant of the Greek Doric order.(11 votes)
- Atthey mention that most wealthy families were "woven facturers"? I couldn't understand what was said, sorry. 1:20(2 votes)
- How did Alberti reflect the influences of humanism in his art?(3 votes)
- why was it not completed?(3 votes)
- I think he died before it was done. That or he quit on it.(1 vote)
- Starting atrepeated references are made to the palace of the Medici as though that is a place with which we are already familiar. Is there a video on that somewhere that I missed? 1:35(3 votes)
- It is vaguely mentioned beforehand, but seeing as the Medici's were so influential, that I guess it would be assumed that we are familiar with the Medici Palace and other general topics. It was easily missed.(1 vote)
- Minute-128, "At this particular moment in Florentine history, it was important that Rucellai family express his loyalty to the Medici family" 1:24
Why was expressing loyalty to the Medici family so particularly important?"(2 votes)- the medici family was a very rich and influential family in most of Europe. Showing loyalty to them was kind of like a sign of prestige. the Medici family were also the patrons of this building(3 votes)
- Where and when was Vitruvius' work on ancient Roman architecture discovered? Could we get a video on Vitruvius or whatever there is that academia knows about him and his writings as well?(3 votes)
- Maybe I missed it - is this considered Early or High Renaissance?(1 vote)
Video transcript
(light jazz piano music) - [Voiceover] Just a few years after the Medici Palace was completed, and only a few blocks away, one of the other wealthiest families in Florence, built a palace. - [Voiceover] Well there was a
whole boom in palace building after the Medici built their palace. And so we're looking at
the Palazzo Rucellai, whose architect was the famous Alberti. Now Alberti was a brilliant humanist. He wrote an important
book on architecture, in addition to his
famous book on painting. - [Voiceover] Alberti's "On Architecture" is probably the most important treatise on architecture after the
10 books of architecture by the ancient Roman Vitruvius. - [Voiceover] Right, which
it had only been discovered a few decades earlier. So, there's this whole revival of ancient Roman architecture. And we see that a little
bit in the Medici Palace, but we see it really here in
the Rucellai Palace by Alberti. - [Voiceover] What's fascinating is that Alberti is looking back to
Vitruvius's ancient work, seeing this standardized vocabulary, and employing it in a self-conscious way, that is announcing its historicism. - [Voiceover] Announcing its looking back to ancient Roman architecture. Alberti had been in Rome, he had studied ancient Roman architecture. - [Voiceover] And the
classicism is not coming through only in the individual elements, but also in the emphasis
on measure and harmony. Giovanni Rucellai came from
a wealthy Florentine family, of wool manufacturers. - [Voiceover] Like most
wealthy Florentines, that's how they made their money. - [Voiceover] At this particular moment in Florentine history, it was important that Rucellai express his loyalty to the Medici family. Alberti was clearly referencing the Medici Palace, and you can see that in the
organization of the facade, into three primary stories. But there are also really
important differences, and you can see that
especially in the masonry. For example, this building
is much more delicate, gone is that heavy,
dark, rusticated masonry that we saw in the earlier building. - [Voiceover] Right,
that gave the impression of the Medici Palace as
being almost like a fortress, and recalling the Palazzo Vecchio. - [Voiceover] This building
feels much more intellectual in its geometry, its lightness,
it's sense of the cerebral. - [Voiceover] So we see
more classical elements here than we saw in the Medici Palace. We have pilasters, rounded arches, although we did see that
also in the Medici Palace. But in-between the stories,
instead of just a string course, we have more classical entablature, which gives us a sense of horizontality and which is filled with
decorative patterns, between the ground floor
and the first floor. We see a Medici device, of a diamond ring with three
feathers coming out of it, and between the second
floor and the third floor, we see a device of the Rucellai family, of a sail that appears to
be blowing in the wind. - [Voiceover] If you start at the bottom, just like the Medici Palace, there are benches on the ground floor, which is an invitation for
the citizens of the city to come and rest. - [Voiceover] So the ground floor, very much feels like the ground floor. It has a sense of weightiness, that comes from that diamond pattern. - [Voiceover] And as
you move up the facade, there are three sets of pilasters. Each with different capitals. At the bottom you see variations
of the Tuscan traditions, or of the simplest heaviest. Above that a form of the Ionic, and then at the top, Corinthian. - [Voiceover] And we see that
differentiation of orders, also if we go to the Colosseum in Rome, where at the bottom we have the Tuscan. The middle story is decorated
with the Ionic order, and at the top with the Corinthian. So, Alberti is clearly looking at ancient Rome and architecture. - [Voiceover] But the building's
emphasis is not vertical, even though you've got the pilasters moving from top to bottom. Because those pilasters are interrupted by these very elaborate entablatures that really emphasize the horizontality, the grounded quality of the building. - [Voiceover] Now the
building was never finished. About 2/3rds of what
Alberti intended is there. And you can see it's
unfinished on the right side, and so there would have
been a third entrance. - [Voiceover] Alberti did
more than simply the facade. The structure was remodeled on the inside, joining a number of pre-existing
independent structures. - [Voiceover] Now Alberti may
also have designed the Loggia, that is caddy-cornered to
the Palazzo, the palace. This is an open space, with round arches, beautiful columns with Corinthian capitals and pilasters on the interior wall, also very classicizing. And this loggia may in
fact have been built to commemorate a wedding between a member of the Medici family
and the Rucellai family. So a joining of these two
powerful Florentine families. - [Voiceover] Actually
it's important to note, that it's no longer an open loggia, it's now got a glass covering, and it's actually a shoe store. But originally it would
have been an open space that would have protected
people as they walked through. And reminds us, that even the palace, is seen a a kind of civic good. That this was adding to the
beauty and harmony of the city. - [Voiceover] Well we can see
the building of the Palazzo, of the loggia, of this piazza in front, as part of the beautification of the city. that happened in the 15th century. That civic pride that led
the people of Florence to be interested in
beautifying their city, with great works of
sculpture and architecture. - [Voiceover] So, here in the
middle of the 15th century, in the center of Florence, we have this invention of
what humanism looks like, applied to domestic architecture. (light jazz piano music)