21 – The Palladian Model: Variations on an Ideal
On campus
Course 21 – Summer School on campus
Monday 15 – Friday 19 July 2024
Dr Michael Douglas-Scott
£645
Course description
Palladio (1508-1580) was perhaps the most influential of all Renaissance architects and the only one whose work inspired an “ism”. Born in Padua, Andrea di Pietro della Gondola was given his name of “Palladio” within the aristocratic circles of Vicenza. He was adopted by these noblemen to rebrand their town palaces and their country villas in the classical style and they recommended him to their Venetian overlords. Palladio transformed domestic building types throughout the Veneto, by associating them with the grandeur of ancient Roman public architecture. He sanctioned a lavish form of interior decoration by Veronese and other painters of the region, and his Four Books of Architecture (1570) became the most influential architectural treatise of the Renaissance.
This course will counterpose Palladio’s vision of (an especially domestic) classical architecture with its interpretation in Britain by Inigo Jones for the early Stuart monarchs, and subsequently by Lord Burlington in the early eighteenth-century, in the context of the dominant Whig faction; in the latter form, Palladianism was also exported to Britain’s American colonies. Our course will explore the social context of Palladio’s architectural principles and compare it to those of his followers and imitators in later centuries. We shall debate their different understandings of room function, decoration, and the relationship of buildings to their natural environments.
This course will include visits to the comprehensive collection of Palladio’s drawings at The Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA; held in the Victoria and Albert Museum), to the National Gallery, where we shall look at painted allegories by artists like Veronese, to the Banqueting House in Whitehall, and to Burlington’s Chiswick villa.
How to book
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If you have any questions please email us at short.courses@courtauld.ac.uk
Lecturer’s biography
Dr Michael Douglas-Scott is an independent scholar and lecturer specialising in Italian Renaissance painting and patronage. Michael lived in Italy for many years, has lectured extensively on the Italian Renaissance and has published articles in Arte Veneta, The Burlington Magazine, and the Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes. An extensive article on a Bellini altarpiece was published in the journal Artibus et Historiae in November 2022.