Palladianism and the Classical Revival
Palladianism, derived from the villas and treatise of Andrea Palladio, became one of the most influential classical idioms, shaping country houses and public buildings across Britain, America, and beyond.
Definition
The study of the architecture of Andrea Palladio and the movements that revived his principles, especially in eighteenth-century Britain and America.
Scope
This topic covers the architecture of Andrea Palladio and its later revivals, especially the English Palladianism of the early eighteenth century and its export to colonial and early-republican America. It examines Palladio's I quattro libri dell'architettura, his villa and palazzo designs, the temple-fronted house, and the way his synthesis of antique precedent and harmonic proportion was adopted as a model of correct classicism.
Core questions
- What principles underlie Palladio's architecture?
- How did his treatise transmit his ideas across centuries?
- Why did Palladianism flourish in Britain and America?
- How did Palladian classicism relate to other revivals?
Key theories
- Palladio's harmonic proportion
- Palladio's system, set out in his Four Books, of designing rooms and façades according to fixed harmonic ratios and antique precedent, which made his work a model of rational classicism.
- The transmission of Palladianism
- Rudolf Wittkower's account of how Palladio's principles were carried into English architecture by Inigo Jones and the eighteenth-century Burlington circle, becoming a national style.
History
Palladio designed villas and palaces in sixteenth-century Veneto and published his Four Books in 1570; Inigo Jones introduced his manner to England in the early seventeenth century, and a full Palladian revival followed under Lord Burlington in the early eighteenth, spreading to America in the work of Thomas Jefferson and beyond.
Debates
- Faithfulness versus reinvention
- Scholars debate how far later Palladianism faithfully followed Palladio and how far it reinvented him to suit new climates, functions, and national ideologies.
Key figures
- Andrea Palladio
- Inigo Jones
- Lord Burlington
- Rudolf Wittkower
Related topics
Seminal works
- palladio1738
- wittkower1974
- summerson1963
Frequently asked questions
- Who was Andrea Palladio?
- Palladio was a sixteenth-century architect of the Veneto whose villas, palaces, and influential treatise made him one of the most imitated architects in Western history.
- Where can Palladianism be seen?
- Palladian principles appear in English country houses, in buildings such as Chiswick House, and in American works including Thomas Jefferson's Monticello and the design of public buildings.