Relationship Between Architecture and Art
Relationship Between Architecture and Art
Relationship Between Architecture and Art
Ever since Antiquity, architecture - the art of designing and constructing buildings - has always
been closely intertwined with the history of art, for at least three reasons. First, many public works
(especially religious buildings) were designed with aesthetics in mind, as well as functionality. They
were built to inspire as well as serve a public function. As a result, they involved the services of a wide
range of 'artists' and decorative craftsmen as well as labourers. Second, in many of these buildings,
the exteriors and interiors acted as showcases for fine art painting (eg. Sistine Chapel), frieze and relief
sculpture (eg. The Parthenon, European Gothic cathedrals), stained glass art (eg. Chartres Cathedral),
and other artworks like mosaics and metalwork. Thirdly, public building programs typically went hand
in hand with the development of visual art, and most major 'arts' movements (eg. Renaissance,
Baroque, Rococo, Neoclassical) influenced both architecture and the fine arts.
Ancient Architecture
Early architecture had two main functions: (1) to consolidate security and power; (2) to please the
Gods. The richer the society, the more important these functions became.
Egyptian Architecture
The first great civilization to emerge around the Mediterranean basin was that of Egypt (c.3100-2040
BCE). In addition to its own written language, religion and dynastic ruling class, it developed a unique
style of Egyptian architecture, largely consisting of massive burial chambers in the form of Pyramids
(at Giza) and underground tombs (in the desolate Valley of the Kings, Luxor). Design was monumental
but not architecturally complex and employed posts and lintels, rather than arches, although Egyptian
expertise in stone had a strong influence on later Greek architecture. Famous examples of Egyptian
pyramid architecture include: The Step Pyramid of Djoser (c.2630 BCE) designed by Imhotep - one of
the greatest architects of the ancient world - and The Great Pyramid at Giza (c.2550 BCE), also called
the Pyramid of Khufu or 'Pyramid of Cheops' - the oldest of the Seven Wonders of the World, as
compiled by Antipater of Sidon (170-120 BCE). Later, during the Middle and Late Kingdoms (c.2040-
300 CE), the Egyptians constructed a series of palaces at Karnak (eg. Temple of Amon, 1530 BCE
onwards). These structures were adorned with a diverse range of artworks - few of which survive -
including murals, panel paintings, sculptures, and metalwork, depicting various Gods, deities, rulers
and symbolic animals in the unique Egyptian hieratic style of art, together with hieroglyphic
inscriptions.
Sumerian Architecture
Meanwhile, in Mesopotamia and Persia (c.3200-323 BCE), the Sumerian civilization was developing its
own unique building - a type of stepped pyramid called a ziggurat. But in contrast to the pyramids of
the Egyptian Pharaohs, ziggurats were not built as tombs but as man-made mountains to bring the
Sumerian rulers and people closer to their Gods who supposedly dwelt high up in mountains to the
east. Ziggurats were constructed from clay-fired bricks, often finished with coloured glazes.
Minoan Architecture
The first European art of Classical Antiquity was created by the Minoans, based on the island of Crete.
Minoan architecture utilized a mixture of stone, mud-brick and plaster to construct elaborate palaces
(eg. Palace of Knossos c.1700-1400 BCE) as well as domed burial chambers (tholos) hidden in the hills.
Many of these buildings were decorated with colourful murals and fresco paintings, depicting
mythological animal symbols (eg. the bull) and events. Unfortunately most Minoan architecture was
destroyed by earthquakes around 1200 BCE. Crete was then taken over by the Myceneans from
mainland Greece, from where a unified Greek culture and civilization emerged a few centuries later.
Greek Architecture
The history of art and architecture in Ancient Greece is divided into three basic eras: the Archaic Period
(c.600-500 BCE), the Classical Period (c.500-323 BCE) and the Hellenistic Period (c.323-27 BCE). [See
also: Aegean art.] About 600 BCE, inspired by the theory and practice of earlier Egyptian stone masons
and builders, the Greeks set about replacing the wooden structures of their public buildings with stone
structures - a process known as 'petrification'. Limestone and marble was employed for columns and
walls, while terracotta was used for roof tiles and ornaments. Decoration was done in metal, like
bronze.
Like painters and sculptors, Greek architects enjoyed none of the enhanced status accorded to their
successors. They were not seen as artists but as tradesmen. Thus no names of architects are known
before about the 5th century BCE. The most common types of public buildings were temples,
municipal structures, theatres and sports stadiums.
These buildings were famously adorned with a huge range of Greek sculpture - pedimental works,
friezes, reliefs and various types of free-standing statue - of a figurative nature, depicting mythological
heroes and events in Greek history and culture.
Roman Architecture
Unlike the more creative and intellectual Greeks, the Romans were essentially practical people with a
flair for engineering, construction and military matters. In their architecture, as in their art, they
borrowed heavily from both the Etruscans (eg. in their use of hydraulics for swamp-clearing and in the
construction of arches), and also the Greeks, whom they regarded as their superiors in all visual arts.
However, without Roman art - with its genius for copying and adapting Greek styles - most of the
artistic achievements of Greek antiquity would have been lost.
Developments in materials were also crucial, as chronicled by the Roman architect Vitruvius (c.78-10
BCE) in his book De Architectura. This is exemplified by the Roman invention of concrete (opus
cementicium), a mixture of lime mortar, sand, water, and stones, in the 3rd century BCE. This
exceptionally strong and convenient substitute for stone revolutionized Roman engineering and
architecture. As tile-covered concrete began to replace marble as the main building material,
architects could be more daring. Buildings were freed from the rectangular Greek design-plan (with
its undomed roofs and lines of pillars supporting flat architraves) and became less geometric and more
free-flowing.
Like their Egyptian and the Greek predecessors, architects in ancient Rome embellished their public
buildings with a wide range of artworks, including: Roman sculpture (especially reliefs, statues and
busts of the Emperor), fresco murals, and mosaics.
New architectural techniques included the use of concave triangular sections of masonry, known as
pendentives, in order to carry the weight of the ceiling dome to corner piers. This led to the
construction of larger and more magnificent domes, and greater open space inside the building, as
exemplified in the Hagia Sophia. New decorative methods included the introduction of dazzling
mosaics made from glass, rather than stone used by the Romans. The interiors of churches were also
richly decorated with Byzantine art, such as gilding, murals and relief sculptures - but not statues as
these were not venerated as icons.
Developments (600-1450)
After the Early period of Byzantine architecture (c.300-600), which was largely a continuation of
Roman architecture, there came a Middle Period (c.600-1100), notable only for the popularity of the
cross-in-square type architectural church design (examples include the monastery of Hosios Lukas in
Greece (c.1000), and the Daphni Monastery near Athens (c.1050); after this came the Comnenian and
Paleologan periods (c.1100-1450), known only for rare achievements like Elmali Kilise and other rock
sanctuaries of Cappadocia, the Churches of the Pantokrator and of the Theotokos Kyriotissa in
Constantinople.
As the Eastern Roman Empire continued, Byzantine architecture gradually became more influenced
by eastern traditions of construction and decoration. Buildings increased in geometric complexity,
while brick and plaster were employed in addition to stone for decorative purposes, like the external
zig-zag patterns. The previous 'Classical Orders' or styles were interpreted more freely, and windows
filtered light through thin sheets of alabaster to create softer illumination. The two basic design-plans
were the basilican, or axial, type (eg. The basilica at the Holy Sepulchre, Jerusalem) and the circular,
or central, type (eg. the great octagonal church at Antioch).
Romanesque Style
The term Romanesque architecture is sometimes used to cover all immediate derivations of Roman
architecture in the West, following the collapse of Rome until the flowering of the Gothic style in about
1200. More usually however, it denotes a distinctive style that emerged almost simultaneously in
France, Germany, Italy and Spain (the latter also influenced by Moorish designs) in the 11th century.
It is characterized most obviously by a new massiveness of scale, inspired by the greater economic
and political stability that arrived after centuries of turmoil.
Unfortunately, the Carolingian empire rapidly dissolved, but Charlemagne's patronage of architecture
and the arts to promote Christianity, marked a vital first step in the re-emergence of a European-wide
culture. Moreover, many of the Romanesque and Gothic churches and monasteries were built on the
foundations of Carolingian architecture. Charlemagne's pre-Romanesque architectural efforts were
later continued by Otto 1 (Holy Roman Emperor 936-73), in a style known as Ottonian Art, which gave
way to the fully fledged 'Romanesque.' (Note: the Romanesque style in England and Ireland is
commonly referred to as Norman architecture.)
Religion
Christianity continued to be the dominant driving force for most significant building works. The
flowering of the Romanesque style in the 11th century coincided with the reassertiveness of Rome, as
the capital of Christianity, and its influence upon secular authorities led to the Christian re-conquest
of Spain (began 1031) and the Crusades to free the Holy Land from Islamic control. The acquisition of
Holy Relics by the Crusaders, together with the fervour aroused by their campaigns, triggered the
construction of a wave of new churches and cathedrals across Europe. In Italy, they include the
Cathedral of Pisa with its famous leaning campanile (bell tower), Modena Cathedral and Parma
Cathedral, as well as famous churches like the Santa Maria (Rome), the Baptistery (Florence), and San
Zeno Maggiore (Verona). In France, they include Laon Cathedral (among others), and the abbeys of
Cluny, Aux Dames (Caen) and Les Hommes (Mont Saint-Michel). In England, they include 26 out of 27
ancient Cathedrals, such as Winchester, Ely and Durham. In Germany, they include Augsburg and
Worms Cathedrals (among others) and the abbeys of Mainz, Worms, Speyer and Bamberg. (See
German Medieval Art.) In addition to its influence over international politics, the Roman Church also
exercised growing power through its network of Bishops and its close association with Monastic orders
such as the Benedictines, the Cistercians, Carthusians and Augustinian Canons. From these
monasteries, Bishops and Abbots exercised a growing administrative power over the local population,
and devoted huge resources to religious works, including illuminated gospel manuscripts, cultural
scholarship, metalwork, sculpture and church building. This is exemplified by the powerful Benedictine
monastery at Cluny in Burgundy, whose abbey church typified the Romanesque style of architecture
and became the largest building in Europe until the Renaissance.
Despite its relative simplicity of style, Romanesque architecture did reinstigate two important forms
of fine art: sculpture (which had largely disappeared since the fall of Rome) and stained glass. But
given the size of windows in Romanesque style buildings, the latter remained a relatively minor
element in Medieval art until the advent of Gothic designs. See also: Romanesque Sculpture.
Romanesque Revival architecture was a 19th century style championed by architects like the
Louisiana-born Henry Hobson Richardson (1838-86), who was responsible for "Richardsonian
Romanesque", as exemplified by the Marshall Field Wholesale Store (1885-87), in Chicago.
NOTE: For a comparison with Eastern designs of the same period, see: the 11th century Kandariya
Mahadeva Hindu Temple (1017-29) in India; and the 12th century Angkor Wat Khmer Temple (1115-
45) in Cambodia.
Gothic Architecture
The term 'Gothic' denotes a style of architecture and art that superceded Romanesque, from the mid-
12th century to the mid-15th century. Coined originally as a term of abuse by Italian Renaissance
artists and others like Christopher Wren, to describe the type of Medieval architecture they
considered barbaric, as if to suggest it was created by Gothic tribes who had destroyed classical art of
Antiquity, the Gothic art style is characterized by the use of pointed arches, thinner walls, ribbed
vaults, flying buttresses, huge stained glass windows and elaborate tracery. Think of it as a sort of
finer, more vertical, more detailed, brighter, more exciting and more inspirational form of
Romanesque. The Gothic style as applied to cathedrals is usually divided into two variations:
Rayonnant Gothic Architecture (c.1200-1350) and Flamboyant Gothic Architecture (1375-1500).
Modern critics like John Ruskin had a high opinion of the Gothic style. For more, see: Gothic
Architecture. See also: Gothic Sculpture.
Background
The 12th century was a period of growth in trade and urban development throughout Europe. This
inceasing prosperity, together with advances in science and geometry, plus new ideas about how
cathedrals could be built in order to inspire religious devotion among the masses, were all important
factors in the development of gothic architecture. Although the new style was closely associated with
the promotion of religion, and although much of the gothic building program was financed by
monastic orders and local bishops, it was not a religious architectural movement. In a way, Christianity
was a product brand used by secular authorities, to compete for prestige and influence. As a result,
Kings and lesser administrators saw cathedrals as major civic and commercial assets, and supported
their construction accordingly.
Architectural Style
Renaissance architecture was catalyzed by the rediscovery of architectural styles and theories of
Ancient Rome. The first depictions of this Classical architecture emerged in Italy during the early 15th
century when a copy of De Architectura ("Ten Books Conerning Architecture") by the 1st century
Roman architect Vitruvius, was sudddenly unearthed in Rome. At the same time, the Florentine
architect and artist Filippo Brunellesci (1377-1446) had begun studying ancient Roman designs, and
was convinced that ideal building proportions could be ascertained from mathematical and
geometrical principles. It was Brunellesci's magnificent 1418 design for the dome of the Florence
Cathedral (1420-36) - now regarded as the first example of Renaissance architecture - which ushered
in a new style based on the long-neglected placement and proportion rules of Classical Antiquity.
Other famous Italian architects included: (1) Donato Bramante (1444-1514), the leading designer of
the High Renaissance; (2) Guiliano da Sangallo (1443-1516), an important intermediary architect
between the Early and High Renaissance periods; (3) Michelangelo Buonarroti (1475-1564), a leading
architect, as well as one of the greatest sculptors and painters of the age; (4) Baldassare Peruzzi (1481-
1536), an important architect and interior designer; (5) Raffaello Santi (Raphael) (1483-1520), a
visionary designer as well as painter; (6) Michele Sanmicheli (1484-1559), the most famous pupil of
Bramante; (7 & 8) Jacopo Sansovino (1486-1570) and Andrea Palladio (1508-1580), the two top figures
in Venetian Renaissance architecture; (9) Giulio Romano (1499-1546), the main exponent of Italian
Mannerist-style architecture; (10) Giorgio Vasari (1511-1574) who designed the loggia for the Uffizi
gallery and the connecting Vasari Corridor; and (11) Vincenzo Scamozzi (1548-1616) one of the great
theorists of the late Renaissance.
Inspired by civic rivalry between the Ducal States, Brunellesci's dome made the Florentine cathedral
the tallest building in Tuscany. In its architectural design, it combined the Gothic tradition of stone
vaulting and the principles of Roman engineering. Its herring-bone bonding of brickwork and
concentric rings of masonry blocks dispensed with the need for centring, which was unmanagable at
the height involved.
Commissioned by Pope Julius II (1443-1513), the rebuilding of the 1,100 year old church of St Peter's
in Rome (1506-1626) was the work of numerous architects, including Bramante, Raphael, Sangallo,
Maderno, Michelangelo and Bernini, and extended beyond the High Renaissance into the Mannerist
and Baroque eras. Its features include a 87-feet high lantern on top of a huge ovoid dome (altered
from Michelangelo's hemispherical design due to fears of instability), and a frontal facade
incorporating a gigantic Order of pilastered Corinthian columns, each 90 feet high. At 452 feet, St
Peter's is taller than any other Renaissance church.
In general, Baroque architecture constituted part of the struggle for religious superiority and for the
hearts and minds of worshippers across Europe. On a more political level, secular Baroque
architecture was employed to buttress the absolutism of reigning monarchs, like King Louis XIV of
France, among others. From Italy, it spread to the rest of Europe - especially Catholic Europe - where
each country typically developed its own interpretation. See also: German Baroque Art.
In England, the leader of the Baroque style was Sir John Vanbrugh (1664-1726), designer of Blenheim
Palace; while in Russia, Bartolomeo Rastrelli (1700-1771) was chiefly responsible for the style known
as Russian Baroque, but which incorporated elements of both early Neoclassical and Rococo
architecture. Rastrelli designed the Winter Palace (1754-62), Smolny Cathedral (1748-57) in St
Petersburg, and redesigned Catherine's Palace, outside the city.
Unlike other major architectural movements, like Romanesque, Gothic or Baroque, Rococo was really
concerned with interior design. This was because it emerged and remained centred in France, where
rich patrons were unwilling to rebuild houses and chateaux, preferring instead to remodel their
interiors. And the style was far too whimsical and light-hearted for the exteriors of religious and civic
buildings. As a result, Rococo architects - in effect, interior designers - confined themselves to creating
elaborately decorated rooms, whose plasterwork, murals, tapestries, furniture, mirrors, porcelain,
silks, chinoiserie and other embellishments presented the visitor with a complete aesthetic experience
- a total work of art (but hardly architecture!)
Rococo perfectly reflected the decadent indolence and degeneracy of the French Royal Court and High
Society. Perhaps because of this, although it spread from France to Germany, where it proved more
popular with Catholics than Protestants, it was less well received in other European countries like
England, The Low Countries, Spain and even Italy. It was swept away by the French Revolution and by
the sterner Neoclassicism which heralded a return to Classical values and styles, more in keeping with
the Age of Enlightenment and Reason.
Neoclassical architecture originated in Paris, largely due to the presence of French designers trained
at the French Academy in Rome. Famous French architects included: Jacques Germain Soufflot (1713-
80), who designed the Pantheon (1756-97) in Paris; Claude Nicolas Ledoux (1736-1806), designer of
the Royal Saltworks at Arc-et-Senans (1773-93) and the Cathedral of Saint-Germaine (1762-64); and
Jean Chalgrin, who designed the Arc de Triomphe (1806). In England the tradition was maintained by
Paris-trained Sir William Chambers, Robert Adam (1728-92), John Nash (1752-1835), Sir John Sloane
(1753-1837), William Wilkins (1778-1839) and Sir Robert Smirke (1780-1867). It was quickly adopted
by progressive circles in Sweden as well. In Germany, Neoclassical architects included: Carl Gotthard
Langhans (1732-1808), designer of the Brandenburg Gate (1789-91) in Berlin; Karl Friedrich Schinkel
(1781-1841), responsible for the Konzerthaus on Gendarmenmarkt (1818-21), the Tegel Palace (1821-
4), and the Altes Museum (1823-30), all in Berlin. These two architects transformed the Prussian
capital of Berlin to rival Paris or Rome in classical splendour.
Russian Neoclassicism
Rastrelli's Baroque style Russian buildings, like the Winter Palace (1754-62), did not find favour with
Catherine the Great (1762-1850), who preferred Neoclassical designs. As a result, she summoned the
Scottish architect Charles Cameron (c.1745–1812), who built the Pavlovsk Palace (1782-86) near St
Petersburg, the Razumovsky Palace in the Ukraine (1802) and the Alexander Palace outside St
Petersburg (1812). Other important neoclassical architects for the Russian Czars included: Vincenzo
Brenna (Cameron's pupil), Giacomo Quarenghi and Matvey Fyodorovich Kazakov.
American Neoclassicism
The United States Capitol Building, with its neoclassical frontage and dome, is one of America's most
recognizable and iconic structures. Begun in 1793, its basic design was the work of William Thornton
(1759-1828), reworked by Benjamin Latrobe (1764-1820), Stephen Hallet and Charles Bulfinch (1763-
1844). The dome and rotunda were initially built from wood, but later replaced with stone and iron.
The overall design was inspired by both the eastern facade of the Louvre Museum in Paris, and by the
Pantheon in Rome. Latrobe himself went on to design numerous other buildings in America, in the
Neoclassical style including: the Bank of Pennsylvania (1789), Richmond Capitol (1796), the Fairmount
Waterworks, Philadelphia (1799), and the Baltimore Exchange (1816), to name but a few. Bulfinch
completed the Capitol in the 1820s, setting the template for other state capitols in the process, and
then returned to his architectural practice in Boston. A key figure in the development of American
architecture during the early 19th century, was the third US President Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826),
whose strong preference for neoclassicism, in the design of public buildings, had a strong influence on
his contemporaries.
• 1919-33 Bauhaus Design (Walter Gropius); this evolves into the International Style of Modern
Architecture (1940-70).
• 1990-2000 Blobitecture: buildings designed with totally unique, organic forms, often resembling a
blob or amoeba shape