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===Major architectural works===
===Major architectural works===
Vignola's main works include:
Vignola's main works include:
[[File:Il Gesu.jpg|thumb|250px|[[Church of the Gesù]], Rome]]

*[[Villa Giulia]] for [[Pope Julius III]], in Rome (1550‑1553). Here Vignola was working with [[Bartolomeo Ammanati|Ammanati]], who designed the [[nymphaeum]] and other garden features under the general direction of [[Vasari]], with guidance from the knowledgeable pope and [[Michelangelo]]. A medal of 1553 shows Vignola's main villa substantially as it was completed, save for a pair of cupolas.
*[[Villa Giulia]] for [[Pope Julius III]], in Rome (1550‑1553). Here Vignola was working with [[Bartolomeo Ammanati|Ammanati]], who designed the [[nymphaeum]] and other garden features under the general direction of [[Vasari]], with guidance from the knowledgeable pope and [[Michelangelo]]. A medal of 1553 shows Vignola's main villa substantially as it was completed, save for a pair of cupolas.
*[[Villa Farnese]] at Caprarola (1559–1573);
*[[Villa Farnese]] at Caprarola (1559–1573);
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===Other architectural works===
===Other architectural works===
[[File:Cloister of the Pontifical University of St. Thomas Aquinas.JPG|thumb|350px|[[Cloister]] of the [[Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas|Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas, ''Angelicum'']]]]
[[File:Cloister of the Pontifical University of St. Thomas Aquinas.JPG|thumb|250px|[[Cloister]] of the [[Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas|Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas, ''Angelicum'']]]]
*The main courtyard of the [[Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas|Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas, ''Angelicum'']], formerly the convent of the [[Santi Domenico e Sisto|Church of Santi Domenico e Sisto]], is traditionally attributed to Vignola but completed after his death. Ten arches on the long sides and seven on the short are sustained by pilasters with Tuscan style ornamentation that rise from high plinths. A simple frieze with smooth [[triglyph]]s and [[Metope (architecture)|metopes]] separates the lower from the upper levels.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.romaspqr.it/roma/Fontane/Fontane%20Palazzi%20Cortili/fontana_chiesa_ss_domenico_e_sisto.htm |title= |website=www.romaspqr.it |access-date=3 May 2013}}{{SemiBareRefNeedsTitle|date=May 2022}}</ref>
*The main courtyard of the [[Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas|Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas, ''Angelicum'']], formerly the convent of the [[Santi Domenico e Sisto|Church of Santi Domenico e Sisto]], is traditionally attributed to Vignola but completed after his death. Ten arches on the long sides and seven on the short are sustained by pilasters with Tuscan style ornamentation that rise from high plinths. A simple frieze with smooth [[triglyph]]s and [[Metope (architecture)|metopes]] separates the lower from the upper levels.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.romaspqr.it/roma/Fontane/Fontane%20Palazzi%20Cortili/fontana_chiesa_ss_domenico_e_sisto.htm |title= |website=www.romaspqr.it |access-date=3 May 2013}}{{SemiBareRefNeedsTitle|date=May 2022}}</ref>
* Project for the facade of the [[Basilica of San Petronio]] (1545 ca.), [[Bologna]].
* [[Church of Santa Maria dell'Orto]] ([[1576]] - [[1578 | 78]]), [[Rome]]; only the facade is by Vignola.
* [[Orti Farnesiani]] to [[Palatine]], [[Rome]].
* [[St. Peter's Basilica in the Vatican]], assumed the role of chief architect after the death of [[Michelangelo Buonarroti]].
* Project of the [[Church of Sant'Anna dei Palafrenieri]] in [[Vatican City]] ([[1570]] ca), with plan and oval dome inserted in a rectangle, made by Giacinto Barozzi. The scheme will be taken up by many architects [[Baroque architecture | baroque]].
* [[Palazzo Contrari Boncompagni]], [[Vignola]].
* [[Bomarzo]]: Temple in the [[Park of the Monsters]].
* [[Caprarola]]:
** [[Church of San Marco (Caprarola) | Church of San Marco]].
** Hospital of San Giovanni.
** [[Palazzo Pazziello]]
** [[Palazzo Maviani]].
* [[Capranica]]: [[Church of the Madonna del Piano]].
* [[Collevecchio]]: Palazzo Pistolini.
* [[Fara Sabina]]: Tabernacle of Sant'Antonio Martire.
* [[Farfa]]: Works at [[Farfa Abbey | Abbey]] consisting of a fountain and a mill.
* [[Grotte di Castro]]: Town hall (project of 1568), later altered.
* [[Isola Bisentina]]: [[Church of Saints Giacomo Cristoforo (Isola Bisentina) | Church of Saints Giacomo and Cristoforo]] (1562), built by the pupil [[Antonio Garzoni]] from Viggiù.
* [[Isola Farnese]]: Castle.
* [[Latera]]: [[Palazzo Farnese (Latera) | Palazzo Farnese]] (1550). * [[Nepi]]:
** [[Aqueduct of Nepi]].
** Works at the Monastery of San Domenico; difficult to identify interventions, including hydraulic works.
* [[Oriolo Romano]]:
** Piazza Umberto I and the Fountain of the Spades.
** [[Palazzo Altieri (Oriolo Romano) | Palazzo Altieri]].
* [[Poli (Italy) | Poli]]: Villa Catena, the parts attributable to Vignola are not certain.
* [[Rieti]]:
** [[Palazzo del Seminario (Rieti) | Palazzo del Seminario]], obtained from the transformation of pre-existing buildings.
** [[Church of Sant'Antonio Abate (Rieti) | Church of Sant'Antonio Abate]].
* [[Rome]]:
** [[Church of Santa Caterina dei Funari]], Ricci or Ruiz Chapel.
** [[Church of Santa Maria dell'Orto]], facade (about 1568) then completed by [[Francesco Capriani]] from Volterra.
** [[Church of Santa Maria in Transpontina]].
** Works in San Lorenzo in Damaso and portal of the Chancellery.
** [[Palazzo Borghese]].
** [[Palazzo Farnese (Rome)]].
** [[Palazzo del Vignola]] to [[Piazza Navona]].
** [[Palazzetto Spada]].
* [[Sant'Oreste (Italy) | Sant'Oreste sul Soratte]]:
** Church of San Lorenzo; the construction was not followed by Vignola and only partially reflects the original project.
** [[Palazzo Caccia Canali]].
* [[Vejano]]: Funerary shrine of [[Santacroce (family) | Holy Cross]]; chapel located in the center of the medieval village, of uncertain attribution.
* [[Velletri]]: [[Velletri # Civil architecture | City Hall]]; with [[Giacomo della Porta]].
* [[Vetralla]]:
** Porta Romana; of uncertain attribution.
** Franciosoni Palace; of ancient attribution and Vignolesque school.
* [[Vignanello]]: [[Castello Ruspoli]]; of uncertain attribution. * [[Viterbo]]:
** [[Porta Faulle]]
** Fountain of Piazza della Rocca; commissioned by the Farnese.
* Palazzo Bocchi (1545), [[Bologna]]. * [[Palazzo Boncompagni (Bologna) | Palazzo Boncompagni]], [[Bologna]].
* Staircase in the [[Palazzo Isolani]], [[Bologna]].
* Palazzo Bufalini (1562), [[Città di Castello]].
* [[Palazzo Nobili-Tarugi]], [[Montepulciano]].
* [[La Castellina]] (1554), [[Norcia]].
* [[Palazzo del Giardino]], [[Parma]].
* [[Rocca di San Giorgio]], [[San Giorgio Piacentino]].
* [[Temple of Santa Maria della Consolazione]], [[Todi]].


===Unbuilt works===
===Unbuilt works===

Revision as of 22:36, 4 October 2022

Vignola
Giacomo Barozzi da Vignola
Born
Giacomo[a] Barozzi[b] da Vignola

(1507-10-01)1 October 1507
Vignola, Duchy of Ferrara (present-day Italy)
Died7 July 1573(1573-07-07) (aged 65)
Rome, Papal States (present-day Italy)
NationalityItalian
Known forArchitecture, Garden design
Notable workVilla Farnese
Church of the Gesù
Villa Lante
MovementMannerism
The five orders, engraving from Vignola's Regola delli cinque ordini d'architettura.

Giacomo[a] Barozzi[b] da Vignola (UK: /vɪnˈjlə/ vin-YOH-lə,[1] US: /vnˈ-/ veen-,[2] Italian: [ˈdʒaːkomo baˈrɔttsi da (v)viɲˈɲɔːla]; 1 October 1507 – 7 July 1573), often simply called Vignola, was one of the great Italian architects of 16th century Mannerism. His two great masterpieces are the Villa Farnese at Caprarola and the Jesuits' Church of the Gesù in Rome. The three architects who spread the Italian Renaissance style throughout Western Europe are Vignola, Serlio and Palladio. He is often considered the most important architect in Rome in the Mannerist era.[3]

Biography

Giacomo Barozzi was born at Vignola, near Modena (Emilia-Romagna).[4]

He began his career as architect in Bologna, supporting himself by painting and making perspective templates for inlay craftsmen. He made a first trip to Rome in 1536 to make measured drawings of Roman temples, with a thought to publish an illustrated Vitruvius. Then François I called him to Fontainebleau, where he spent the years 1541–1543. Here he probably met his fellow Bolognese, the architect Sebastiano Serlio and the painter Primaticcio.

After his return to Italy, he designed the Palazzo Bocchi in Bologna. Later he moved to Rome. Here he worked for Pope Julius III and, after the latter's death, he was taken up by the papal family of the Farnese and worked with Michelangelo, who deeply influenced his style (see Works section for details of his works in this period).

In 1558, he was in Piacenza to revise the designs of Palazzo Farnese, commissioned by Margaret of Austria, wife of the Duke Ottavio Farnese and daughter of Emperor Charles V.

From 1564 Vignola carried on Michelangelo's work at St Peter's Basilica,[4] and constructed the two subordinate domes according to Michelangelo's plans.

Giacomo Barozzi died in Rome in 1573.[4] In 1973 his remains were reburied in the Pantheon, Rome.

Works

Major architectural works

Vignola's main works include:

Church of the Gesù, Rome

Other architectural works

Cloister of the Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas, Angelicum

Unbuilt works

Like many other architects, Vignola submitted his plans for completing the facade of San Petronio, Bologna. Designs by Vignola, in company with Baldassare Peruzzi, Giulio Romano, Andrea Palladio and others furnished material for an exhibition in 2001[6]

Written works

Le due regole della prospettiva prattica, 1682

His two published books helped formulate the canon of classical architectural style. The earliest, Regola delli cinque ordini d'architettura ["Canon of the five orders of architecture"] (first published in 1562, probably in Rome), presented Vignola's practical system for constructing columns in the five classical orders (Tuscan, Doric, Ionic, Corinthian and Composite) utilising proportions which Vignola derived from his own measurements of classical Roman monuments.[7] The clarity and ease of use of Vignola's treatise caused it to become in succeeding centuries the most published book in architectural history.[8] Vignola's second treatise, Due regole della prospettiva pratica ["Two rules of practical perspective"], published posthumously with extensive commentary by the mathematician Ignazio Danti (Bologna 1583), favours one-point perspective rather than two-point methods such as the bifocal construction. Vignola presented— without theoretical obscurities— practical applications which could be understood by a prospective patron.[9][full citation needed]

Notes

  1. ^ a b or Jacopo
  2. ^ a b or Barocchio

References

  1. ^ "Vignola, Giacomo Barozzi da". Lexico UK English Dictionary. Oxford University Press.[dead link]
  2. ^ "Vignola". Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary. Retrieved 28 July 2019.
  3. ^ De Agostini 2011, p. 200.
  4. ^ a b c Chisholm 1911.
  5. ^ www.romaspqr.it http://www.romaspqr.it/roma/Fontane/Fontane%20Palazzi%20Cortili/fontana_chiesa_ss_domenico_e_sisto.htm. Retrieved 3 May 2013. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)Template:SemiBareRefNeedsTitle
  6. ^ Marzia Faietti and Massimo Medica, 2001. La Basilica incompiuta: Progetti antichi per la facciata di San Petronio (Ferrara: Edisai)
  7. ^ Center for Palladian Studies in America, Inc., Palladio's Literary Predecessors
  8. ^ Vignola, Canon of the Five Orders of Architecture, translated with an introduction by Branko Mitrovic (New York: Acanthus Press, 1999), p. 17. ISBN 0-926494-16-3.
  9. ^ Gietmann 1913.
Palazzo Farnese, Piacenza, inner yard
Attribution

Sources

External links