Italian Neoclassical architecture
Architecture of Italy |
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Periods and styles |
Ancient Roman Romanesque Gothic Renaissance and Mannerist Baroque Rococo Neoclassical Fascist Modern and contemporary |
Palaces and gardens |
List of palazzi in Italy - Italian Renaissance garden - Giardino all'italiana |
Notable works |
St. Peter's Basilica - Santa Maria del Fiore |
Notable architects |
Vitruvius - Palladio - Pietro da Cortona - Leon Battista Alberti - Giacomo della Porta - Filippo Brunelleschi - Donato Bramante - Francesco Borromini - Bernini - Carlo Maderno - Michelangelo - Filippo Juvarra - Giò Ponti - Aldo Rossi - Renzo Piano - List of Italian architects |
By region |
North-Western Italian architecture - North-Eastern Italian architecture - Central Italian architecture - Southern Italian architecture |
Other topics |
Timeline of architectural trends - Sicilian baroque - Trullo - Venetian Gothic architecture |
Italian Neoclassical architecture refers to architecture in Italy during the Neoclassical period (1750s - 1850s).[1]
History and influences
In the 1750s and 1760s, the rich and frivolous Rococo was going out of fashion, and there was a growing desire to return to the simple, yet elegant classicism of architecture in Ancient Greece, Ancient Rome and to a lesser extent Renaissance architecture. In its purest form it is this new style principally derived from the architecture of Classical Greece and the architecture of Italian Andrea Palladio. Since it was widely based on Classicism, the movement was named Neo-Classicism. Neoclassical did not particularly evolve in any particular nation, but the founders were France, England, Italy, Germany and Spain. Everything from villas, palaces, gardens, interiors and art began to be based on Roman and Greek themes,[1] and buildings were also widely themed on the Villa Capra "La Rotonda", the masterpiece by Andrea Palladio.
Buildings and edifices
Before the discoveries of the lost cities of Pompeii and Herculaneum, buildings were themed on Ancient Rome and Classical Athens, but were later inspired by these archaeological sites.[2] Examples of Neoclassical architecture in Italy include Luigi Cagnola's Arco della Pace,[2] the San Carlo Theatre (Naples, 1810),[3] San Francesco di Paolo (Naples, 1817), Pedrocchi Café (Padua, 1816), Canova Temple, (Posagno, 1819), Teatro Carlo Felice (Genoa, 1827) and the Cisternone (Livorno, 1829).[3]
Gallery
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The Church of San Francesco di Paola (Naples)
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A view from Lake Como on the Neoclassical Villa Melzi
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The Accademia Carrara in Bergamo
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The Neoclassical Villa Olmo in Como
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Palazzo Tarsis, Milan
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One of the Porta Venezia booths in Milan, sandwiched between Corso Venezia and Corso Buenos Aires
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The Gran Madre di Dio Church in Turin
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