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NEOCLASSICAL
ARCHITECTURE
SYNOPSIS
• AIM:- TO STUDY AND RESEARCH ONNEOCLASSICAL ARCHITECTURE
• TOPICS COVERED:-EARLY CLASSICAL REVIVAL, EXOTIC/EGYPTIAN
REVIVAL,PALLADIANISM, INTERIOR DESIGN, GREEK REVIVAL, REGIONAL TRENDS,
NEOCLASSICAL ARCHITECTURE TODAY, IN ADDITION TO GOTHIC REVIVAL AND
VICTORIAN ERA
• OBJECTIVE:- TO FIND OUT THE CHARACTERSTICS OF THE ABOVE ARCHITECTURE STYLES
THEIR SIGNIFICANCE AND IMPORTANCE .
CONTENTS
• EARLY CLASSICAL REVIVAL
• EXOTIC/EGYPTIAN REVIVAL
• PALLADIANISM
• INTERIOR DESIGN
• GREEK REVIVAL
• REGIONAL TRENDS
NEOCLASSICAL ARCHITECTURE TODAY
GOTHIC REVIVAL
LATE VICTORIAN ERA
Early Classical Revival Style: Roman
Classical Revival 1790 - 1830, Greek
Revival 1820- 1860
• The Early Classical Revival style developed at the end of the 18th century and reflected
a desire to take architectural inspiration directly from the ancient buildings of Rome
and Greece. While earlier styles (the Georgian and Federal styles) were also inspired
by these classical forms, they relied more on architectural details and did not attempt
to recreate the look of those ancient buildings. The Roman Classical Revival style
(sometimes called Roman Classicism) and later the Greek Revival style emulated the
form of classical Roman and Greek temples. The Roman Classical Revival style was
promoted and popularized by Thomas Jefferson, who found the impressively
monumental architecture of ancient Rome a suitable model for the newly formed
nation. This style was thus a political symbol as well, likening the young United States to
the once powerful and influential Roman Republic
• Jefferson designed his own home Monticello, the campus of the University of Virginia, and
the Capitol of Virginia in this style, using ancient Roman temples as his guide. The Roman
Classical Revival style was rarely found north of Pennsylvania, with most examples occurring
in southern states. The Bank of Pennsylvania, built in 1800 in Philadelphia, was an early
important example of this style.
• The emphasis turned from Rome to Greece as the Greek Revival style developed around
1820. American interest in the culture of ancient Greece grew from sympathy for the Greek
War of Independence (1821-1830) and emerging archaeological finds showing Greece as
the earliest democracy. Also, Roman inspired architecture was associated with England,
and after the War of 1812, there was a strong desire to shake off English influence and define
a new national style. The Greek Revival style has much in common with the Roman Classical
Revival style in its reliance on the temple form, front pediment, and classical order columns.
There is considerable variation in the public and private buildings designed in this style.
Some buildings appear to be Greek temple replicas and others simply use the temple shape
and form with distinctive details. There are many more surviving examples of the Greek
Revival style in Pennsylvania than theRoman Classical Revival style, because the later Greek
Revival style was far more popular and wide spread
IDENTIFIABLE FEATURES
• Early Classical Revival Style
• 1. Full height entry porch (portico) with pediment and columns
• 2. Lunette window in portico pediment
• 3. Elliptical fanlight over paneled front door
• 4. Symmetrically aligned windows and door (5 bay front facade most common)
• 5. Side gabled or low pitched hipped roof
• 6. Large windows and doors
• Greek Revival Style
• 1. Front gabled roof
• 2. Front porch with columns
• 3. Front facade corner pilasters
• 4. Broad cornice
• 5. Attic or frieze level windows
EXOTIC/EGYPTIAN REVIVAL STYLE
• The Egyptian Revival style is simply the addition of Egyptian inspired columns and decorative
motifs to buildings that are similar to the Greek Revival or Italianate styles in form. Scholarly
interest in the archaeological discoveries of ancient Egypt early in the 19th century led to
the development of Egyptian-themed buildings. The style attempted to recreate the
appearance of Egyptian temples, especially with the use of massive columns that resemble
sheaves of sticks tied at the top and bottom. Details refer to ancient Egyptian symbols—the
phoenix, the sphinx, and the vulture and sun disk. This style was most often applied to public
buildings, banks, prisons, courthouses, offices, and cemetery structures. This style was often
chosen for buildings representing eternity and the afterlife. The Egyptian Revival Style
flourished yet again for public buildings (especially movie theaters) from 1920 to 1930, often
utilizing poured concrete as a building material. The 1835 Philadelphia County Prison
(demolished in 1968) was one of the first Egyptian Revival buildings in the U.S., of imposing
stone design by architect Thomas Ulrich Walter. Most surviving examples of the Egyptian
Revival style are theaters, cemetery mausoleums and entry buildings, and banks. The
entrance gate to the Pottsville Cemetery with its massive columns and use of symbolic
funereal decorative details is an excellent example of the Egyptian Revival style.
CHARACTERISTICS
• Egyptian Revival Style
• 1. Massive columns resembling bundles of sticks
• 2. Vulture & sun disk symbol
• 3. Rolled (cavetto) cornice
• 4. Window enframements that narrow upward
PALLADIANISM
• A return to more classical architectural forms as a reaction to the Rococo style can be detected in some
European architecture of the earlier 18th century, most vividly represented in the Palladian architecture of
Georgian Britain and Ireland.
• The baroque style had never truly been to the English taste. Four influential books were published in the first
quarter of the 18th century which highlighted the simplicity and purity of classical architecture: Vitruvius
Britannicus (Colen Campbell 1715), Palladio's Four Books of Architecture (1715), De Re Aedificatoria (1726) and
The Designs of Inigo Jones... with Some Additional Designs (1727). The most popular was the four-volume
Vitruvius Britannicus by Colen Campbell. The book contained architectural prints of famous British buildings that
had been inspired by the great architects from Vitruvius to Palladio. At first the book mainly featured the work of
Inigo Jones, but the later tomes contained drawings and plans by Campbell and other 18th-century architects.
Palladian architecture became well established in 18th-century Britain.
• At the forefront of the new school of design was the aristocratic "architect earl", Richard Boyle, 3rd Earl of
Burlington; in 1729, he and William Kent, designed Chiswick House. This House was a reinterpretation of Palladio's
Villa Capra, but purified of 16th century elements and ornament. This severe lack of ornamentation was to be a
feature of the Palladianism. In 1734 William Kent and Lord Burlington designed one of England's finest examples
of Palladian architecture with Holkham Hall in Norfolk. The main block of this house followed Palladio's dictates
quite closely, but Palladio's low, often detached, wings of farm buildings were elevated in significance.
• This classicizing vein was also detectable, to a lesser degree, in the Late Baroque architecture in Paris, such as in
Perrault's east range of the Louvre. This shift was even visible in Rome at the redesigned facade for S. Giovanni in
Laterano.
• Neoclassical architecture is an architectural style produced by the neoclassical
movement that began in the mid-18th century. In its purest form it is a style principally
derived from the architecture of Classical antiquity, the Vitruvian principles and the
architecture of the Italian architect Andrea Palladio.
• In form, Neoclassical architecture emphasizes the wall rather than chiaroscuro and
maintains separate identities to each of its parts. The style is manifested both in its
details as a reaction against the Rococo style of naturalistic ornament, and in its
architectural formulae as an outgrowth of some classicising features of Late Baroque.
Neoclassical architecture is still designed today, but may be labelled New Classical
Architecture for contemporary buildings
• By the mid 18th century, the movement broadened to incorporate a greater range of Classical
influences, including those from Ancient Greece. The shift to neoclassical architecture is
conventionally dated to the 1750s. It first gained influence in England and France; in England, Sir
William Hamilton's excavations at Pompeii and other sites, the influence of the Grand Tour and
the work of William Chambers and Robert Adam, was pivotal in this regard. In France, the
movement was propelled by a generation of French art students trained in Rome, and was
influenced by the writings of Johann Joachim Winckelmann. The style was also adopted by
progressive circles in other countries such as Sweden and Russia.
• International neoclassical architecture was exemplified in Karl Friedrich Schinkel's buildings,
especially the Old Museum in Berlin, Sir John Soane's Bank of England in London and the newly
built White House and Capitol in Washington, DC of the nascent American Republic. The style
was international.
• A second neoclassic wave, more severe, more studied and more consciously archaeological,
is associated with the height of the Napoleonic Empire. In France, the first phase of
neoclassicism was expressed in the "Louis XVI style", and the second in the styles called
"Directoire" or Empire. The Rococo style remained popular in Italy until the Napoleonic regimes
brought the new archaeological classicism, which was embraced as a political statement by
young, progressive, urban Italians with republican leanings.[according to whom?]
• In the decorative arts, neoclassicism is exemplified in French furniture of the Empire style; the
English furniture of Chippendale, George Hepplewhite and Robert Adam, Wedgwood's bas
reliefs and "black basaltes" vases, and the Biedermeier furniture of Austria. The Scottish architect
Charles Cameron created palatial Italianate interiors for the German-born Catherine II the
Great in St. Petersburg.
Palladian revival: Stourhead House,
designed by Colen Campbell and
completed in 1720. The design is based on
Palladio's Villa Emo
Woburn Abbey, an excellent example of
English Palladianism, designed by
Burlington's student Henry Flitcroft in 1746
Altes Museum, built by Karl Friedrich Schinkel in Berlin.
INTERIOR DESIGN
• Indoors, neoclassicism made a discovery of the genuine classic interior, inspired by the rediscoveries at Pompeii and
Herculaneum. These had begun in the late 1740s, but only achieved a wide audience in the 1760s, with the first luxurious
volumes of tightly controlled distribution of Le Antichità di Ercolano (The Antiquities of Herculaneum). The antiquities of
Herculaneum showed that even the most classicizing interiors of the Baroque, or the most "Roman" rooms of William Kent
were based on basilica and temple exterior architecture turned outside in, hence their often bombastic appearance to
modern eyes: pedimented window frames turned into gilded mirrors, fireplaces topped with temple fronts.
• The new interiors sought to recreate an authentically Roman and genuinely interior vocabulary. Techniques employed in the
style included flatter, lighter motifs, sculpted in low frieze-like relief or painted in monotones en camaïeu ("like cameos"),
isolated medallions or vases or busts or bucrania or other motifs, suspended on swags of laurel or ribbon, with slender
arabesques against backgrounds, perhaps, of "Pompeiian red" or pale tints, or stone colors. The style in France was initially a
Parisian style, the Goût grec ("Greek style"), not a court style; when Louis XVI acceded to the throne in 1774, Marie
Antoinette, his fashion-loving Queen, brought the "Louis XVI" style to court..
• However there was no real attempt to employ the basic forms of Roman furniture until around the turn of the century, and
furniture-makers were more likely to borrow from ancient architecture, just as silversmiths were more likely to take from
ancient pottery and stone-carving than metalwork: "Designers and craftsmen ... seem to have taken an almost perverse
pleasure in transferring motifs from one medium to another
• A new phase in neoclassical design was inaugurated by Robert and James Adam, who
travelled in Italy and Dalmatia in the 1750s, observing the ruins of the classical world.
On their return to Britain, they published a book entitled The Works in Architecture in
installments between 1773 and 1779. This book of engraved designs made the Adam
repertory available throughout Europe. The Adam brothers aimed to simplify the rococo
and baroque styles which had been fashionable in the preceding decades, to bring
what they felt to be a lighter and more elegant feel to Georgian houses. The Works in
Architecture illustrated the main buildings the Adam brothers had worked on and
crucially documented the interiors, furniture and fittings, designed by the Adams.
Château de Malmaison, 1800, room for
the Empress Joséphine, on the cusp
between Directoire style and Empire style
Interior of Home House in London,
designed by Robert Adam in 1777
in the Adam style.
GREEK REVIVAL
• From about 1800 a fresh influx of Greek architectural examples, seen through the medium of etchings
and engravings, gave a new impetus to neoclassicism, the Greek Revival. There was little to no direct
knowledge of Greek civilization before the middle of the 18th century in Western Europe, when an
expedition funded by the Society of Dilettanti in 1751 and led by James Stuart and Nicholas Revett
began serious archaeological enquiry. Stuart was commissioned after his return from Greece by George
Lyttelton to produce the first Greek building in England, the garden temple at Hagley Hall (1758–59).[2] A
number of British architects in the second half of the century took up the expressive challenge of the
Doric from their aristocratic patrons, including Joseph Bonomi and John Soane, but it was to remain the
private enthusiasm of connoisseurs up to the first decade of the 19th century.
• Seen in its wider social context, Greek Revival architecture sounded a new note of sobriety and restraint
in public buildings in Britain around 1800 as an assertion of nationalism attendant on the Act of Union, the
Napoleonic Wars, and the clamour for political reform. It was to be William Wilkins's winning design for
the public competition for Downing College, Cambridge that announced the Greek style was to be the
dominant idiom in architecture. Wilkins and Robert Smirke went on to build some of the most important
buildings of the era, including the Theatre Royal, Covent Garden (1808–09), the General Post Office
(1824–29) and the British Museum (1823–48), Wilkins University College London (1826–30) and the
National Gallery (1832–38). In Scotland, Thomas Hamilton (1784-1858), in collaboration with the artists
Andrew Wilson (1780-1848) and Hugh William Williams (1773-1829) created monuments and buildings of
international significance; the Burns Monument at Alloway (1818) and the (Royal) High School in
Edinburgh (1823-29).
• At the same time the Empire style in France was a more grandiose wave of neoclassicism in
architecture and the decorative arts. Mainly based on Imperial Roman styles, it originated in, and took
its name from, the rule of Napoleon I in the First French Empire, where it was intended to idealize
Napoleon's leadership and the French state. The style corresponds to the more bourgeois Biedermeier
style in the German-speaking lands, Federal style in the United States, the Regency style in Britain, and
the Napoleonstil in Sweden. According to the art historian Hugh Honour "so far from being, as is
sometimes supposed, the culmination of the Neo-classical movement, the Empire marks its rapid
decline and transformation back once more into a mere antique revival, drained of all the high-
minded ideas and force of conviction that had inspired its masterpieces"
• Neoclassicism continued to be a major force in academic art through the 19th century and beyond—
a constant antithesis to Romanticism or Gothic revivals— although from the late 19th century on it had
often been considered anti-modern, or even reactionary, in influential critical circles.[
Thomas Hamilton's design for the Royal High
School, Edinburgh, 1831
CHARACTERISTICS
• High neoclassicism was an international movement. Though neoclassical architecture employed the
same classical vocabulary as Late Baroque architecture, it tended to emphasize its planar qualities,
rather than sculptural volumes. Projections and recessions and their effects of light and shade were more
flat; sculptural bas-reliefs were flatter and tended to be enframed in friezes, tablets or panels. Its clearly
articulated individual features were isolated rather than interpenetrating, autonomous and complete in
themselves.
• Neoclassicism also influenced city planning; the ancient Romans had used a consolidated scheme for
city planning for both defense and civil convenience, however, the roots of this scheme go back to even
older civilizations. At its most basic, the grid system of streets, a central forum with city services, two main
slightly wider boulevards, and the occasional diagonal street were characteristic of the very logical and
orderly Roman design. Ancient facades and building layouts were oriented to these city design patterns
and they tended to work in proportion with the importance of public buildings.
• Many of these urban planning patterns found their way into the first modern planned cities of the 18th
century. Exceptional examples include Karlsruhe and Washington DC. Not all planned cities and
planned neighborhoods are designed on neoclassical principles, however. Opposing models may be
found in Modernist designs exemplified by Brasilia, the Garden city movement, levittowns, and new
urbanism.
REGIONAL TRENDS
• BRITAIN
• From the middle of the 18th century, exploration and publication changed the course of
British architecture towards a purer vision of the Ancient Greco-Roman ideal. James
'Athenian' Stuart's work The Antiquities of Athens and Other Monuments of Greece was very
influential in this regard, as were Robert Wood's Palmyra and Baalbec. A combination of
simple forms and high levels of enrichment was adopted by the majority of contemporary
British architects and designers. The revolution begun by Stuart was soon to be eclipsed by
the work of the Adam Brothers, James Wyatt, Sir William Chambers, George Dance, James
Gandon and provincially based architects such as John Carr and Thomas Harrison of
Chester.
• In the early 20th century, the writings of Albert Richardson were responsible for a re-
awakening of interest in pure neoclassical design. Vincent Harris (compare Harris's
colonnaded and domed interior of Manchester Central Reference Library to the colonnaded
and domed interior by John Carr and R R Duke), Bradshaw Gass & Hope and Percy Thomas
were among those who designed public buildings in the neoclassical style in the interwar
period. In the British Raj in India, Sir Edwin Lutyens' monumental city planning for New Delhi
marked the sunset of neoclassicism. In Scotland and the north of England, where the Gothic
Revival was less strong, architects continued to develop the neoclassical style of William
Henry Playfair. The works of Cuthbert Brodrick and Alexander Thomson show that by the end
of the 19th century the results could be powerful and eccentric.
FRANCE
• The first phase of neoclassicism in France is expressed in the "Louis XVI style" of architects like Ange-
Jacques Gabriel (Petit Trianon, 1762–68); the second phase, in the styles called Directoire and "Empire",
might be characterized by Jean Chalgrin's severe astylar Arc de Triomphe (designed in 1806). In England
the two phases might be characterized first by the structures of Robert Adam, the second by those of Sir
John Soane. The interior style in France was initially a Parisian style, the "Goût grec" ("Greek style") not a
court style. Only when the young king acceded to the throne in 1771 did Marie Antoinette, his fashion-
loving Queen, bring the "Louis XVI" style to court.
• From about 1800 a fresh influx of Greek architectural examples, seen through the medium of etchings
and engravings, gave a new impetus to neoclassicism that is called the Greek Revival. Although several
European cities — notably St Petersburg, Athens, Berlin and Munich — were transformed into veritable
museums of Greek revival architecture, the Greek revival in France was never popular with either the
State or the public.
• What little there was, started with Charles de Wailly's crypt in the church of St Leu-St Gilles (1773–80), and
Claude Nicolas Ledoux's Barriere des Bonshommes (1785–89). First-hand evidence of Greek architecture
was of very little importance to the French, due to the influence of Marc-Antoine Laugier's doctrines that
sought to discern the principles of the Greeks instead of their mere practices. It would take until
Laboustre's Neo-Grec of the second Empire for the Greek revival to flower briefly in France.
SPAIN
• Spanish Neoclassicism was exemplified by the work of Juan de Villanueva, who
adapted Burke's theories of beauty and the sublime to the requirements of Spanish
climate and history. He built the Prado Museum, that combined three functions — an
academy, an auditorium and a museum — in one building with three separate
entrances.
• This was part of the ambitious program of Charles III, who intended to make Madrid the
Capital of the Arts and Sciences. Very close to the museum, Villanueva built the
Astronomical Observatory. He also designed several summer houses for the kings in El
Escorial and Aranjuez and reconstructed the Major Square of Madrid, among other
important works. Villanueva´s pupils expanded the Neoclassical style in Spain.
POLISH -LITHUANIAN
COMMONWEALTH
• The center of Polish Neoclassicism was Warsaw under the rule of the last Polish king Stanislaw August
Poniatowski. Vilnius University was another important center of the Neoclassical architecture in Europe,
led by notable professors of architecture Marcin Knackfus, Laurynas Gucevicius and Karol
Podczaszynski. The style was expressed in the shape of main public buildings, such as the University's
Observatory, Vilnius Cathedral and the town hall.
• The best-known architects and artists, who worked in Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth were Dominik
Merlini, Jan Chrystian Kamsetzer, Szymon Bogumil Zug, Jakub Kubicki, Antonio Corazzi, Efraim Szreger,
Christian Piotr Aigner and Bertel Thorvaldsen.
• HUNGARY
• The earliest examples of neoclassical architecture in Hungary may be found in Vác. In this town the
triumphal arch and the neoclassical facade of the baroque Cathedral were designed by the French
architect Isidor Marcellus Amandus Ganneval (Isidore Canevale) in the 1760s. Also the work of a French
architect Charles Moreau is the garden facade of the Esterházy Palace (1797-1805) in Kismarton (today
Eisenstadt in Austria). The two prinicpal architect of Neoclassicism in Hungary was Mihály Pollack and
József Hild. Pollack's major work is the Hungarian National Museum (1837-1844). Hild is famous for his
designs for the Cathedral of Eger and Esztergom.
USA
• In the new republic, Robert Adam's neoclassical manner was adapted for the local late 18th and early
19th-century style, called "Federal architecture". One of the pioneers of this style was English-born
Benjamin Henry Latrobe, who is often noted as one of the first formally trained America's professional
architects and the father of American architecture. The Baltimore Basilica, the first Roman Catholic
Cathedral in the United States, is considered by many experts to be Latrobe's masterpiece.
• The widespread use of neoclassicism in American architecture, as well as by French revolutionary
regimes, and the general tenor of rationalism associated with the movement, all created a link between
neoclassicism and republicanism and radicalism in much of Europe. The Gothic Revival can be seen as
an attempt to present a monarchist and conservative alternative to neoclassicism.
• In later 19th-century American architecture, neoclassicism was one expression of the American
Renaissance movement, ca 1880-1917. Its last manifestation was in Beaux-Arts architecture (1885–1920),
and its very last, large public projects in the United States were the Lincoln Memorial (1922), the National
Gallery in Washington, D.C. (1937), and the American Museum of Natural History's Roosevelt Memorial
(1936).
• Today, there is a small revival of Classical Architecture as evidenced by the groups such as The Institute
of Classical Architecture and Classical America.The School of Architecture at the University of Notre
Dame, currently teaches a fully Classical curriculum
USSR
• In the Soviet Union (1917–1991), neoclassical architecture was very popular among the
political elite, as it effectively expressed state power, and a vast array of neoclassical
building was erected all over the country. "
• Soviet neoclassical architecture was exported to other socialist countries of the Eastern Bloc,
as a gift from the Soviet Union. Examples of this include the Palace of Culture and Science,
Warsaw, Poland and the Shanghai International Convention Centre in Shanghai, China.
• THE THIRD REICH
• Neoclassical architecture was the preferred style by the leaders of the National Socialist
movement in the Third Reich, especially admired by Adolf Hitler himself. Hitler commissioned
his favourite architect, Albert Speer, to plan a re-design of Berlin as a city comprising
imposing neoclassical structures, which would be renamed as Welthauptstadt Germania,
the centrepiece of Hitler's Thousand Year Reich.
• These plans never came to fruition due to the eventual downfall of Nazi Germany and the
suicide of its leader
A. Rinaldi. The White hall of the
Gatchina palace. 1760s. An early
example of the Italianate neoclassical
interior design in Russian architecture.
The central courtyard
of Sir William Chambers'
Somerset House in
London
Château de
Montmusard (1765),
by Charles de
Wailly
Prado Museum
in Madrid, by
Jun de
Villanueva
Cathedral of Vác by Isidor
Marcellus Amandus
Ganneval, 1762-1777
The Lincoln Memorial, an early
20th century example of
American Renaissance
neoclassical architecture
The Red Army Theatre in
Moscow, Russia
NEOCLASSICAL ARCHITECTURE
TODAY• After a lull during the period of modern architectural dominance (roughly post-World War
II until the mid-1980s), neoclassicism has seen somewhat of a resurgence. This rebirth can
be traced to the movement of New Urbanism and postmodern architecture's embrace of
classical elements as ironic, especially in light of the dominance of Modernism. While
some continued to work with classicism as ironic, some architects such as Thomas
Gordon Smith, began to consider classicism seriously. While some schools had interest in
classical architecture, such as the University of Virginia, no school was purely dedicated
to classical architecture. In the early 1990s a program in classical architecture was
started by Smith and Duncan Stroik at the University of Notre Dame that continues
successfully.[7] Programs at the University of Miami, Andrews University, Judson University
and The Prince's Foundation for Building Community have trained a number of new
classical architects since this resurgence. Today one can find numerous buildings
embracing neoclassical style, since a generation of architects trained in this discipline
shapes urban planning.
• As of the first decade of the 21st century, contemporary neoclassical architecture is
usually classed under the umbrella term of New Classical Architecture. Sometimes it is
also referred to as Neo-Historicism/Revivalism, Traditionalism or simply neoclassical
architecture like the historical style.[8] For sincere traditional-style architecture that sticks
to regional architecture, materials and craftsmanship, the term Traditional Architecture
(or vernacular) is mostly used. The Driehaus Architecture Prize is awarded to major
contributors in the field of 21st century traditional or classical architecture, and comes
with a prize money twice as high as that of the modernist Pritzker Prize
The Keating Millennium
Centre at St. Francis Xavier
University, Canada,
completed in 2001
Gothic Revival Style 1830 - 1860
• The Gothic Revival style is part of the mid-19th century picturesque and romantic
movement in architecture, reflecting the public’s taste for buildings inspired by
medieval design. This was a real departure from the previously popular styles that drew
inspiration from the classical forms of ancient Greece and Rome. While distinctly
different, both the Gothic Revival style and the Greek Revival style looked to the past,
and both remained popular throughout the mid 19th century. The Gothic Revival style
in America was advanced by architects Alexander Jackson Davis and especially
Andrew Jackson Downing, authors of influential house plan books, Rural Residences
(1837), Cottage Residences (1842), and The Architecture of Country Houses (1850). This
style was promoted as an appropriate design for rural settings, with its complex and
irregular shapes and forms fitting well into the natural landscape. Thus, the Gothic
Revival style was often chosen for country homes and houses in rural or small town
settings.
• The most commonly identifiable feature of
the Gothic Revival style is the pointed arch,
used for windows, doors, and decorative
elements like porches, dormers, or roof
gables. Other characteristic details include
steeply pitched roofs and front facing
gables with delicate wooden trim called
vergeboards or bargeboards. This distinctive
incised wooden trim is often referred to as
“gingerbread” and is the feature most
associated with this style. Gothic Revival
style buildings often have porches with
decorative turned posts or slender columns,
with flattened arches or side brackets
connecting the posts. Gothic Revival style
churches may have not just pointed arch
windows and porticos, but often feature a
Norman castle-like tower with a crenellated
parapet or a high spire
Identifiable Features
1. Pointed arches as decorative element and as
window shape
2. Front facing gables with decorative incised trim
(vergeboards or bargeboards)
3. Porches with turned posts or columns
4. Steeply pitched roof
5. Gables often topped with finials or crossbracing
6. Decorative crowns (gable or drip mold) over
windows and doors
7. Castle-like towers with parapets on some high
style buildings
8. Carpenter Gothic buildings have distinctive board
and batten vertical siding
Late Victorian Period 1850 - 1910
• The Late Victorian Period covers the later half of the 19th century, for a portion of the true reign of
Britain's Queen Victoria (1837-1901) for which this era is named. This was the time period in American
architecture known for intricate and highly decorative styles such as the Second Empire, Romanesque
Revival, Victorian Gothic, Queen Anne, Stick/Eastlake, Shingle, Renaissance Revival and Chateauesque.
All of these style are often described as "Victorian" and indeed may buildings of this era borrowed stylistic
elements from several styles, and were not pure examples of any.
• The Late Victorian Period was a time of growth and change in America. Advances in building
technology such as the development of balloon framing and factory-built architectural components
made it easier to build larger, more complex and more decorative structures. The expanding railroad
system allowed these products to be transported across the country at a more reasonable cost.
Heretofore luxury elements could be employed in a wide variety of more modest buildings. It was an
expansive time in American culture and the buildings of this period reflect this. Most Victorian styles look
to historic precedents for inspiration, but the architectural designs of the era were not exact replicas of
those earlier buildings. The tall, steeply roofed, asymmetrical form of Victorian era buildings is based on a
Medieval prototype, with a variety of stylistic details applied. Elements of the Greek Revival, Gothic
Revival, and Italianate styles continued to appear, but often in a more complex form, in combination
with one another. New stylistic trends like the Second Empire style, Queen Anne style, Stick/Eastlake style,
Romanesque Revival, Renaissance Revival and Chateauesque style, borrowed from those previous
styles, but offered new shapes, forms and combinations of decorative features.
• Romanesque Revival Style 1840 - 1900
Identifiable Features
1. Masonry construction
2. Round arches at entrance windows
3. Heavy and massive appearance
4. Polychromatic stonework on details
5. Round tower
6. Squat columns
7. Decorative plaque
• Second Empire/Mansard Style 1860 - 1900
Identifiable Features
1. Mansard roof
2. Patterned shingle roof
3. Iron roof crest
4. Decorative window surrounds and dormers
5. Eaves with brackets
6. One story porch
7. Tower
8. Quoins
9. Balustrade
• High Victorian Gothic Style 1860 - 1890
Identifiable Features
1. Linear decorative polychrome bands of brick or
stone
2. Masonry construction
3. Stone quoins
4. Pointed arch (Gothic) windows and doorways
5. Steeply gabled roofs, often with cross gables
6. Ornamental pressed brick and terra cotta tiles
7. Patterned brick chimneys
8. Corbelled brickwork
9. Turret with conical roof
• Chateauesque Style 1860 - 1910
Identifiable Features
1. French chateau-like appearance
2. Round tower with conical roof
3. Steeply pitched hipped or gable roof, often with
cresting
4. Tall chimneys with decorative caps
5. Round arch or flattened basket-handle arch entry
6. Multiple dormers
7. Quatrefoil or arched tracery decorative elements
8. Balustraded terrace
9. Usually of masonry (stone or brick) construction
• Stick Style 1860 - 1890
Identifiable features
1. Steeply pitched gable roof
2. Cross gables
3. Decorative trusses at gable peak
4. overhanging eaves with exposed rafters
5. Wood exterior walls with clapboards
6. horizontal, vertical or diagonal decorative wood
trim - stickwork
7. Porches with diagonal or curved braces
8. Towers
• Queen Anne Style 1880 - 1910
Identifiable Features
1. Abundance of decorative elements
2. Steeply pitched roof with irregular shape
3. Cross gables
4. Asymmetrical facade
5. Large partial or full width porch
6. Round or polygonal corner tower
7. Decorative spindlework on porches and gable
trim
8. Projecting bay windows
9. Patterned masonry or textured wall surfaces
including half timbering
10. Columns or turned post porch supports
11. Patterned shingles
12. Single pane windows, some with small
decorative panes or stained glass
• Shingle Style 1880 - 1900
Identifiable Features
1. Shingled walls and roof
2. Asymmetrical facade
3. Irregular roof lines
4. Moderately pitched roofs
5. Cross gables
6. Extensive wide porches
7. Small sash or casement windows with many panes
8. Round or polygonal shingled towers

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Neoclassical architecture ,Late victorian era and gothic revival

  • 2. SYNOPSIS • AIM:- TO STUDY AND RESEARCH ONNEOCLASSICAL ARCHITECTURE • TOPICS COVERED:-EARLY CLASSICAL REVIVAL, EXOTIC/EGYPTIAN REVIVAL,PALLADIANISM, INTERIOR DESIGN, GREEK REVIVAL, REGIONAL TRENDS, NEOCLASSICAL ARCHITECTURE TODAY, IN ADDITION TO GOTHIC REVIVAL AND VICTORIAN ERA • OBJECTIVE:- TO FIND OUT THE CHARACTERSTICS OF THE ABOVE ARCHITECTURE STYLES THEIR SIGNIFICANCE AND IMPORTANCE .
  • 3. CONTENTS • EARLY CLASSICAL REVIVAL • EXOTIC/EGYPTIAN REVIVAL • PALLADIANISM • INTERIOR DESIGN • GREEK REVIVAL • REGIONAL TRENDS NEOCLASSICAL ARCHITECTURE TODAY GOTHIC REVIVAL LATE VICTORIAN ERA
  • 4. Early Classical Revival Style: Roman Classical Revival 1790 - 1830, Greek Revival 1820- 1860 • The Early Classical Revival style developed at the end of the 18th century and reflected a desire to take architectural inspiration directly from the ancient buildings of Rome and Greece. While earlier styles (the Georgian and Federal styles) were also inspired by these classical forms, they relied more on architectural details and did not attempt to recreate the look of those ancient buildings. The Roman Classical Revival style (sometimes called Roman Classicism) and later the Greek Revival style emulated the form of classical Roman and Greek temples. The Roman Classical Revival style was promoted and popularized by Thomas Jefferson, who found the impressively monumental architecture of ancient Rome a suitable model for the newly formed nation. This style was thus a political symbol as well, likening the young United States to the once powerful and influential Roman Republic
  • 5. • Jefferson designed his own home Monticello, the campus of the University of Virginia, and the Capitol of Virginia in this style, using ancient Roman temples as his guide. The Roman Classical Revival style was rarely found north of Pennsylvania, with most examples occurring in southern states. The Bank of Pennsylvania, built in 1800 in Philadelphia, was an early important example of this style. • The emphasis turned from Rome to Greece as the Greek Revival style developed around 1820. American interest in the culture of ancient Greece grew from sympathy for the Greek War of Independence (1821-1830) and emerging archaeological finds showing Greece as the earliest democracy. Also, Roman inspired architecture was associated with England, and after the War of 1812, there was a strong desire to shake off English influence and define a new national style. The Greek Revival style has much in common with the Roman Classical Revival style in its reliance on the temple form, front pediment, and classical order columns. There is considerable variation in the public and private buildings designed in this style. Some buildings appear to be Greek temple replicas and others simply use the temple shape and form with distinctive details. There are many more surviving examples of the Greek Revival style in Pennsylvania than theRoman Classical Revival style, because the later Greek Revival style was far more popular and wide spread
  • 6. IDENTIFIABLE FEATURES • Early Classical Revival Style • 1. Full height entry porch (portico) with pediment and columns • 2. Lunette window in portico pediment • 3. Elliptical fanlight over paneled front door • 4. Symmetrically aligned windows and door (5 bay front facade most common) • 5. Side gabled or low pitched hipped roof • 6. Large windows and doors • Greek Revival Style • 1. Front gabled roof • 2. Front porch with columns • 3. Front facade corner pilasters • 4. Broad cornice • 5. Attic or frieze level windows
  • 7. EXOTIC/EGYPTIAN REVIVAL STYLE • The Egyptian Revival style is simply the addition of Egyptian inspired columns and decorative motifs to buildings that are similar to the Greek Revival or Italianate styles in form. Scholarly interest in the archaeological discoveries of ancient Egypt early in the 19th century led to the development of Egyptian-themed buildings. The style attempted to recreate the appearance of Egyptian temples, especially with the use of massive columns that resemble sheaves of sticks tied at the top and bottom. Details refer to ancient Egyptian symbols—the phoenix, the sphinx, and the vulture and sun disk. This style was most often applied to public buildings, banks, prisons, courthouses, offices, and cemetery structures. This style was often chosen for buildings representing eternity and the afterlife. The Egyptian Revival Style flourished yet again for public buildings (especially movie theaters) from 1920 to 1930, often utilizing poured concrete as a building material. The 1835 Philadelphia County Prison (demolished in 1968) was one of the first Egyptian Revival buildings in the U.S., of imposing stone design by architect Thomas Ulrich Walter. Most surviving examples of the Egyptian Revival style are theaters, cemetery mausoleums and entry buildings, and banks. The entrance gate to the Pottsville Cemetery with its massive columns and use of symbolic funereal decorative details is an excellent example of the Egyptian Revival style.
  • 8. CHARACTERISTICS • Egyptian Revival Style • 1. Massive columns resembling bundles of sticks • 2. Vulture & sun disk symbol • 3. Rolled (cavetto) cornice • 4. Window enframements that narrow upward
  • 9. PALLADIANISM • A return to more classical architectural forms as a reaction to the Rococo style can be detected in some European architecture of the earlier 18th century, most vividly represented in the Palladian architecture of Georgian Britain and Ireland. • The baroque style had never truly been to the English taste. Four influential books were published in the first quarter of the 18th century which highlighted the simplicity and purity of classical architecture: Vitruvius Britannicus (Colen Campbell 1715), Palladio's Four Books of Architecture (1715), De Re Aedificatoria (1726) and The Designs of Inigo Jones... with Some Additional Designs (1727). The most popular was the four-volume Vitruvius Britannicus by Colen Campbell. The book contained architectural prints of famous British buildings that had been inspired by the great architects from Vitruvius to Palladio. At first the book mainly featured the work of Inigo Jones, but the later tomes contained drawings and plans by Campbell and other 18th-century architects. Palladian architecture became well established in 18th-century Britain. • At the forefront of the new school of design was the aristocratic "architect earl", Richard Boyle, 3rd Earl of Burlington; in 1729, he and William Kent, designed Chiswick House. This House was a reinterpretation of Palladio's Villa Capra, but purified of 16th century elements and ornament. This severe lack of ornamentation was to be a feature of the Palladianism. In 1734 William Kent and Lord Burlington designed one of England's finest examples of Palladian architecture with Holkham Hall in Norfolk. The main block of this house followed Palladio's dictates quite closely, but Palladio's low, often detached, wings of farm buildings were elevated in significance. • This classicizing vein was also detectable, to a lesser degree, in the Late Baroque architecture in Paris, such as in Perrault's east range of the Louvre. This shift was even visible in Rome at the redesigned facade for S. Giovanni in Laterano.
  • 10. • Neoclassical architecture is an architectural style produced by the neoclassical movement that began in the mid-18th century. In its purest form it is a style principally derived from the architecture of Classical antiquity, the Vitruvian principles and the architecture of the Italian architect Andrea Palladio. • In form, Neoclassical architecture emphasizes the wall rather than chiaroscuro and maintains separate identities to each of its parts. The style is manifested both in its details as a reaction against the Rococo style of naturalistic ornament, and in its architectural formulae as an outgrowth of some classicising features of Late Baroque. Neoclassical architecture is still designed today, but may be labelled New Classical Architecture for contemporary buildings
  • 11. • By the mid 18th century, the movement broadened to incorporate a greater range of Classical influences, including those from Ancient Greece. The shift to neoclassical architecture is conventionally dated to the 1750s. It first gained influence in England and France; in England, Sir William Hamilton's excavations at Pompeii and other sites, the influence of the Grand Tour and the work of William Chambers and Robert Adam, was pivotal in this regard. In France, the movement was propelled by a generation of French art students trained in Rome, and was influenced by the writings of Johann Joachim Winckelmann. The style was also adopted by progressive circles in other countries such as Sweden and Russia. • International neoclassical architecture was exemplified in Karl Friedrich Schinkel's buildings, especially the Old Museum in Berlin, Sir John Soane's Bank of England in London and the newly built White House and Capitol in Washington, DC of the nascent American Republic. The style was international. • A second neoclassic wave, more severe, more studied and more consciously archaeological, is associated with the height of the Napoleonic Empire. In France, the first phase of neoclassicism was expressed in the "Louis XVI style", and the second in the styles called "Directoire" or Empire. The Rococo style remained popular in Italy until the Napoleonic regimes brought the new archaeological classicism, which was embraced as a political statement by young, progressive, urban Italians with republican leanings.[according to whom?] • In the decorative arts, neoclassicism is exemplified in French furniture of the Empire style; the English furniture of Chippendale, George Hepplewhite and Robert Adam, Wedgwood's bas reliefs and "black basaltes" vases, and the Biedermeier furniture of Austria. The Scottish architect Charles Cameron created palatial Italianate interiors for the German-born Catherine II the Great in St. Petersburg.
  • 12. Palladian revival: Stourhead House, designed by Colen Campbell and completed in 1720. The design is based on Palladio's Villa Emo Woburn Abbey, an excellent example of English Palladianism, designed by Burlington's student Henry Flitcroft in 1746 Altes Museum, built by Karl Friedrich Schinkel in Berlin.
  • 13. INTERIOR DESIGN • Indoors, neoclassicism made a discovery of the genuine classic interior, inspired by the rediscoveries at Pompeii and Herculaneum. These had begun in the late 1740s, but only achieved a wide audience in the 1760s, with the first luxurious volumes of tightly controlled distribution of Le Antichità di Ercolano (The Antiquities of Herculaneum). The antiquities of Herculaneum showed that even the most classicizing interiors of the Baroque, or the most "Roman" rooms of William Kent were based on basilica and temple exterior architecture turned outside in, hence their often bombastic appearance to modern eyes: pedimented window frames turned into gilded mirrors, fireplaces topped with temple fronts. • The new interiors sought to recreate an authentically Roman and genuinely interior vocabulary. Techniques employed in the style included flatter, lighter motifs, sculpted in low frieze-like relief or painted in monotones en camaïeu ("like cameos"), isolated medallions or vases or busts or bucrania or other motifs, suspended on swags of laurel or ribbon, with slender arabesques against backgrounds, perhaps, of "Pompeiian red" or pale tints, or stone colors. The style in France was initially a Parisian style, the Goût grec ("Greek style"), not a court style; when Louis XVI acceded to the throne in 1774, Marie Antoinette, his fashion-loving Queen, brought the "Louis XVI" style to court.. • However there was no real attempt to employ the basic forms of Roman furniture until around the turn of the century, and furniture-makers were more likely to borrow from ancient architecture, just as silversmiths were more likely to take from ancient pottery and stone-carving than metalwork: "Designers and craftsmen ... seem to have taken an almost perverse pleasure in transferring motifs from one medium to another
  • 14. • A new phase in neoclassical design was inaugurated by Robert and James Adam, who travelled in Italy and Dalmatia in the 1750s, observing the ruins of the classical world. On their return to Britain, they published a book entitled The Works in Architecture in installments between 1773 and 1779. This book of engraved designs made the Adam repertory available throughout Europe. The Adam brothers aimed to simplify the rococo and baroque styles which had been fashionable in the preceding decades, to bring what they felt to be a lighter and more elegant feel to Georgian houses. The Works in Architecture illustrated the main buildings the Adam brothers had worked on and crucially documented the interiors, furniture and fittings, designed by the Adams. Château de Malmaison, 1800, room for the Empress Joséphine, on the cusp between Directoire style and Empire style Interior of Home House in London, designed by Robert Adam in 1777 in the Adam style.
  • 15. GREEK REVIVAL • From about 1800 a fresh influx of Greek architectural examples, seen through the medium of etchings and engravings, gave a new impetus to neoclassicism, the Greek Revival. There was little to no direct knowledge of Greek civilization before the middle of the 18th century in Western Europe, when an expedition funded by the Society of Dilettanti in 1751 and led by James Stuart and Nicholas Revett began serious archaeological enquiry. Stuart was commissioned after his return from Greece by George Lyttelton to produce the first Greek building in England, the garden temple at Hagley Hall (1758–59).[2] A number of British architects in the second half of the century took up the expressive challenge of the Doric from their aristocratic patrons, including Joseph Bonomi and John Soane, but it was to remain the private enthusiasm of connoisseurs up to the first decade of the 19th century. • Seen in its wider social context, Greek Revival architecture sounded a new note of sobriety and restraint in public buildings in Britain around 1800 as an assertion of nationalism attendant on the Act of Union, the Napoleonic Wars, and the clamour for political reform. It was to be William Wilkins's winning design for the public competition for Downing College, Cambridge that announced the Greek style was to be the dominant idiom in architecture. Wilkins and Robert Smirke went on to build some of the most important buildings of the era, including the Theatre Royal, Covent Garden (1808–09), the General Post Office (1824–29) and the British Museum (1823–48), Wilkins University College London (1826–30) and the National Gallery (1832–38). In Scotland, Thomas Hamilton (1784-1858), in collaboration with the artists Andrew Wilson (1780-1848) and Hugh William Williams (1773-1829) created monuments and buildings of international significance; the Burns Monument at Alloway (1818) and the (Royal) High School in Edinburgh (1823-29).
  • 16. • At the same time the Empire style in France was a more grandiose wave of neoclassicism in architecture and the decorative arts. Mainly based on Imperial Roman styles, it originated in, and took its name from, the rule of Napoleon I in the First French Empire, where it was intended to idealize Napoleon's leadership and the French state. The style corresponds to the more bourgeois Biedermeier style in the German-speaking lands, Federal style in the United States, the Regency style in Britain, and the Napoleonstil in Sweden. According to the art historian Hugh Honour "so far from being, as is sometimes supposed, the culmination of the Neo-classical movement, the Empire marks its rapid decline and transformation back once more into a mere antique revival, drained of all the high- minded ideas and force of conviction that had inspired its masterpieces" • Neoclassicism continued to be a major force in academic art through the 19th century and beyond— a constant antithesis to Romanticism or Gothic revivals— although from the late 19th century on it had often been considered anti-modern, or even reactionary, in influential critical circles.[ Thomas Hamilton's design for the Royal High School, Edinburgh, 1831
  • 17. CHARACTERISTICS • High neoclassicism was an international movement. Though neoclassical architecture employed the same classical vocabulary as Late Baroque architecture, it tended to emphasize its planar qualities, rather than sculptural volumes. Projections and recessions and their effects of light and shade were more flat; sculptural bas-reliefs were flatter and tended to be enframed in friezes, tablets or panels. Its clearly articulated individual features were isolated rather than interpenetrating, autonomous and complete in themselves. • Neoclassicism also influenced city planning; the ancient Romans had used a consolidated scheme for city planning for both defense and civil convenience, however, the roots of this scheme go back to even older civilizations. At its most basic, the grid system of streets, a central forum with city services, two main slightly wider boulevards, and the occasional diagonal street were characteristic of the very logical and orderly Roman design. Ancient facades and building layouts were oriented to these city design patterns and they tended to work in proportion with the importance of public buildings. • Many of these urban planning patterns found their way into the first modern planned cities of the 18th century. Exceptional examples include Karlsruhe and Washington DC. Not all planned cities and planned neighborhoods are designed on neoclassical principles, however. Opposing models may be found in Modernist designs exemplified by Brasilia, the Garden city movement, levittowns, and new urbanism.
  • 18. REGIONAL TRENDS • BRITAIN • From the middle of the 18th century, exploration and publication changed the course of British architecture towards a purer vision of the Ancient Greco-Roman ideal. James 'Athenian' Stuart's work The Antiquities of Athens and Other Monuments of Greece was very influential in this regard, as were Robert Wood's Palmyra and Baalbec. A combination of simple forms and high levels of enrichment was adopted by the majority of contemporary British architects and designers. The revolution begun by Stuart was soon to be eclipsed by the work of the Adam Brothers, James Wyatt, Sir William Chambers, George Dance, James Gandon and provincially based architects such as John Carr and Thomas Harrison of Chester. • In the early 20th century, the writings of Albert Richardson were responsible for a re- awakening of interest in pure neoclassical design. Vincent Harris (compare Harris's colonnaded and domed interior of Manchester Central Reference Library to the colonnaded and domed interior by John Carr and R R Duke), Bradshaw Gass & Hope and Percy Thomas were among those who designed public buildings in the neoclassical style in the interwar period. In the British Raj in India, Sir Edwin Lutyens' monumental city planning for New Delhi marked the sunset of neoclassicism. In Scotland and the north of England, where the Gothic Revival was less strong, architects continued to develop the neoclassical style of William Henry Playfair. The works of Cuthbert Brodrick and Alexander Thomson show that by the end of the 19th century the results could be powerful and eccentric.
  • 19. FRANCE • The first phase of neoclassicism in France is expressed in the "Louis XVI style" of architects like Ange- Jacques Gabriel (Petit Trianon, 1762–68); the second phase, in the styles called Directoire and "Empire", might be characterized by Jean Chalgrin's severe astylar Arc de Triomphe (designed in 1806). In England the two phases might be characterized first by the structures of Robert Adam, the second by those of Sir John Soane. The interior style in France was initially a Parisian style, the "Goût grec" ("Greek style") not a court style. Only when the young king acceded to the throne in 1771 did Marie Antoinette, his fashion- loving Queen, bring the "Louis XVI" style to court. • From about 1800 a fresh influx of Greek architectural examples, seen through the medium of etchings and engravings, gave a new impetus to neoclassicism that is called the Greek Revival. Although several European cities — notably St Petersburg, Athens, Berlin and Munich — were transformed into veritable museums of Greek revival architecture, the Greek revival in France was never popular with either the State or the public. • What little there was, started with Charles de Wailly's crypt in the church of St Leu-St Gilles (1773–80), and Claude Nicolas Ledoux's Barriere des Bonshommes (1785–89). First-hand evidence of Greek architecture was of very little importance to the French, due to the influence of Marc-Antoine Laugier's doctrines that sought to discern the principles of the Greeks instead of their mere practices. It would take until Laboustre's Neo-Grec of the second Empire for the Greek revival to flower briefly in France.
  • 20. SPAIN • Spanish Neoclassicism was exemplified by the work of Juan de Villanueva, who adapted Burke's theories of beauty and the sublime to the requirements of Spanish climate and history. He built the Prado Museum, that combined three functions — an academy, an auditorium and a museum — in one building with three separate entrances. • This was part of the ambitious program of Charles III, who intended to make Madrid the Capital of the Arts and Sciences. Very close to the museum, Villanueva built the Astronomical Observatory. He also designed several summer houses for the kings in El Escorial and Aranjuez and reconstructed the Major Square of Madrid, among other important works. Villanueva´s pupils expanded the Neoclassical style in Spain.
  • 21. POLISH -LITHUANIAN COMMONWEALTH • The center of Polish Neoclassicism was Warsaw under the rule of the last Polish king Stanislaw August Poniatowski. Vilnius University was another important center of the Neoclassical architecture in Europe, led by notable professors of architecture Marcin Knackfus, Laurynas Gucevicius and Karol Podczaszynski. The style was expressed in the shape of main public buildings, such as the University's Observatory, Vilnius Cathedral and the town hall. • The best-known architects and artists, who worked in Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth were Dominik Merlini, Jan Chrystian Kamsetzer, Szymon Bogumil Zug, Jakub Kubicki, Antonio Corazzi, Efraim Szreger, Christian Piotr Aigner and Bertel Thorvaldsen. • HUNGARY • The earliest examples of neoclassical architecture in Hungary may be found in Vác. In this town the triumphal arch and the neoclassical facade of the baroque Cathedral were designed by the French architect Isidor Marcellus Amandus Ganneval (Isidore Canevale) in the 1760s. Also the work of a French architect Charles Moreau is the garden facade of the Esterházy Palace (1797-1805) in Kismarton (today Eisenstadt in Austria). The two prinicpal architect of Neoclassicism in Hungary was Mihály Pollack and József Hild. Pollack's major work is the Hungarian National Museum (1837-1844). Hild is famous for his designs for the Cathedral of Eger and Esztergom.
  • 22. USA • In the new republic, Robert Adam's neoclassical manner was adapted for the local late 18th and early 19th-century style, called "Federal architecture". One of the pioneers of this style was English-born Benjamin Henry Latrobe, who is often noted as one of the first formally trained America's professional architects and the father of American architecture. The Baltimore Basilica, the first Roman Catholic Cathedral in the United States, is considered by many experts to be Latrobe's masterpiece. • The widespread use of neoclassicism in American architecture, as well as by French revolutionary regimes, and the general tenor of rationalism associated with the movement, all created a link between neoclassicism and republicanism and radicalism in much of Europe. The Gothic Revival can be seen as an attempt to present a monarchist and conservative alternative to neoclassicism. • In later 19th-century American architecture, neoclassicism was one expression of the American Renaissance movement, ca 1880-1917. Its last manifestation was in Beaux-Arts architecture (1885–1920), and its very last, large public projects in the United States were the Lincoln Memorial (1922), the National Gallery in Washington, D.C. (1937), and the American Museum of Natural History's Roosevelt Memorial (1936). • Today, there is a small revival of Classical Architecture as evidenced by the groups such as The Institute of Classical Architecture and Classical America.The School of Architecture at the University of Notre Dame, currently teaches a fully Classical curriculum
  • 23. USSR • In the Soviet Union (1917–1991), neoclassical architecture was very popular among the political elite, as it effectively expressed state power, and a vast array of neoclassical building was erected all over the country. " • Soviet neoclassical architecture was exported to other socialist countries of the Eastern Bloc, as a gift from the Soviet Union. Examples of this include the Palace of Culture and Science, Warsaw, Poland and the Shanghai International Convention Centre in Shanghai, China. • THE THIRD REICH • Neoclassical architecture was the preferred style by the leaders of the National Socialist movement in the Third Reich, especially admired by Adolf Hitler himself. Hitler commissioned his favourite architect, Albert Speer, to plan a re-design of Berlin as a city comprising imposing neoclassical structures, which would be renamed as Welthauptstadt Germania, the centrepiece of Hitler's Thousand Year Reich. • These plans never came to fruition due to the eventual downfall of Nazi Germany and the suicide of its leader
  • 24. A. Rinaldi. The White hall of the Gatchina palace. 1760s. An early example of the Italianate neoclassical interior design in Russian architecture. The central courtyard of Sir William Chambers' Somerset House in London Château de Montmusard (1765), by Charles de Wailly Prado Museum in Madrid, by Jun de Villanueva
  • 25. Cathedral of Vác by Isidor Marcellus Amandus Ganneval, 1762-1777 The Lincoln Memorial, an early 20th century example of American Renaissance neoclassical architecture The Red Army Theatre in Moscow, Russia
  • 26. NEOCLASSICAL ARCHITECTURE TODAY• After a lull during the period of modern architectural dominance (roughly post-World War II until the mid-1980s), neoclassicism has seen somewhat of a resurgence. This rebirth can be traced to the movement of New Urbanism and postmodern architecture's embrace of classical elements as ironic, especially in light of the dominance of Modernism. While some continued to work with classicism as ironic, some architects such as Thomas Gordon Smith, began to consider classicism seriously. While some schools had interest in classical architecture, such as the University of Virginia, no school was purely dedicated to classical architecture. In the early 1990s a program in classical architecture was started by Smith and Duncan Stroik at the University of Notre Dame that continues successfully.[7] Programs at the University of Miami, Andrews University, Judson University and The Prince's Foundation for Building Community have trained a number of new classical architects since this resurgence. Today one can find numerous buildings embracing neoclassical style, since a generation of architects trained in this discipline shapes urban planning. • As of the first decade of the 21st century, contemporary neoclassical architecture is usually classed under the umbrella term of New Classical Architecture. Sometimes it is also referred to as Neo-Historicism/Revivalism, Traditionalism or simply neoclassical architecture like the historical style.[8] For sincere traditional-style architecture that sticks to regional architecture, materials and craftsmanship, the term Traditional Architecture (or vernacular) is mostly used. The Driehaus Architecture Prize is awarded to major contributors in the field of 21st century traditional or classical architecture, and comes with a prize money twice as high as that of the modernist Pritzker Prize The Keating Millennium Centre at St. Francis Xavier University, Canada, completed in 2001
  • 27. Gothic Revival Style 1830 - 1860 • The Gothic Revival style is part of the mid-19th century picturesque and romantic movement in architecture, reflecting the public’s taste for buildings inspired by medieval design. This was a real departure from the previously popular styles that drew inspiration from the classical forms of ancient Greece and Rome. While distinctly different, both the Gothic Revival style and the Greek Revival style looked to the past, and both remained popular throughout the mid 19th century. The Gothic Revival style in America was advanced by architects Alexander Jackson Davis and especially Andrew Jackson Downing, authors of influential house plan books, Rural Residences (1837), Cottage Residences (1842), and The Architecture of Country Houses (1850). This style was promoted as an appropriate design for rural settings, with its complex and irregular shapes and forms fitting well into the natural landscape. Thus, the Gothic Revival style was often chosen for country homes and houses in rural or small town settings.
  • 28. • The most commonly identifiable feature of the Gothic Revival style is the pointed arch, used for windows, doors, and decorative elements like porches, dormers, or roof gables. Other characteristic details include steeply pitched roofs and front facing gables with delicate wooden trim called vergeboards or bargeboards. This distinctive incised wooden trim is often referred to as “gingerbread” and is the feature most associated with this style. Gothic Revival style buildings often have porches with decorative turned posts or slender columns, with flattened arches or side brackets connecting the posts. Gothic Revival style churches may have not just pointed arch windows and porticos, but often feature a Norman castle-like tower with a crenellated parapet or a high spire Identifiable Features 1. Pointed arches as decorative element and as window shape 2. Front facing gables with decorative incised trim (vergeboards or bargeboards) 3. Porches with turned posts or columns 4. Steeply pitched roof 5. Gables often topped with finials or crossbracing 6. Decorative crowns (gable or drip mold) over windows and doors 7. Castle-like towers with parapets on some high style buildings 8. Carpenter Gothic buildings have distinctive board and batten vertical siding
  • 29.
  • 30. Late Victorian Period 1850 - 1910 • The Late Victorian Period covers the later half of the 19th century, for a portion of the true reign of Britain's Queen Victoria (1837-1901) for which this era is named. This was the time period in American architecture known for intricate and highly decorative styles such as the Second Empire, Romanesque Revival, Victorian Gothic, Queen Anne, Stick/Eastlake, Shingle, Renaissance Revival and Chateauesque. All of these style are often described as "Victorian" and indeed may buildings of this era borrowed stylistic elements from several styles, and were not pure examples of any. • The Late Victorian Period was a time of growth and change in America. Advances in building technology such as the development of balloon framing and factory-built architectural components made it easier to build larger, more complex and more decorative structures. The expanding railroad system allowed these products to be transported across the country at a more reasonable cost. Heretofore luxury elements could be employed in a wide variety of more modest buildings. It was an expansive time in American culture and the buildings of this period reflect this. Most Victorian styles look to historic precedents for inspiration, but the architectural designs of the era were not exact replicas of those earlier buildings. The tall, steeply roofed, asymmetrical form of Victorian era buildings is based on a Medieval prototype, with a variety of stylistic details applied. Elements of the Greek Revival, Gothic Revival, and Italianate styles continued to appear, but often in a more complex form, in combination with one another. New stylistic trends like the Second Empire style, Queen Anne style, Stick/Eastlake style, Romanesque Revival, Renaissance Revival and Chateauesque style, borrowed from those previous styles, but offered new shapes, forms and combinations of decorative features.
  • 31. • Romanesque Revival Style 1840 - 1900 Identifiable Features 1. Masonry construction 2. Round arches at entrance windows 3. Heavy and massive appearance 4. Polychromatic stonework on details 5. Round tower 6. Squat columns 7. Decorative plaque
  • 32. • Second Empire/Mansard Style 1860 - 1900 Identifiable Features 1. Mansard roof 2. Patterned shingle roof 3. Iron roof crest 4. Decorative window surrounds and dormers 5. Eaves with brackets 6. One story porch 7. Tower 8. Quoins 9. Balustrade
  • 33. • High Victorian Gothic Style 1860 - 1890 Identifiable Features 1. Linear decorative polychrome bands of brick or stone 2. Masonry construction 3. Stone quoins 4. Pointed arch (Gothic) windows and doorways 5. Steeply gabled roofs, often with cross gables 6. Ornamental pressed brick and terra cotta tiles 7. Patterned brick chimneys 8. Corbelled brickwork 9. Turret with conical roof
  • 34. • Chateauesque Style 1860 - 1910 Identifiable Features 1. French chateau-like appearance 2. Round tower with conical roof 3. Steeply pitched hipped or gable roof, often with cresting 4. Tall chimneys with decorative caps 5. Round arch or flattened basket-handle arch entry 6. Multiple dormers 7. Quatrefoil or arched tracery decorative elements 8. Balustraded terrace 9. Usually of masonry (stone or brick) construction
  • 35. • Stick Style 1860 - 1890 Identifiable features 1. Steeply pitched gable roof 2. Cross gables 3. Decorative trusses at gable peak 4. overhanging eaves with exposed rafters 5. Wood exterior walls with clapboards 6. horizontal, vertical or diagonal decorative wood trim - stickwork 7. Porches with diagonal or curved braces 8. Towers
  • 36. • Queen Anne Style 1880 - 1910 Identifiable Features 1. Abundance of decorative elements 2. Steeply pitched roof with irregular shape 3. Cross gables 4. Asymmetrical facade 5. Large partial or full width porch 6. Round or polygonal corner tower 7. Decorative spindlework on porches and gable trim 8. Projecting bay windows 9. Patterned masonry or textured wall surfaces including half timbering 10. Columns or turned post porch supports 11. Patterned shingles 12. Single pane windows, some with small decorative panes or stained glass
  • 37. • Shingle Style 1880 - 1900 Identifiable Features 1. Shingled walls and roof 2. Asymmetrical facade 3. Irregular roof lines 4. Moderately pitched roofs 5. Cross gables 6. Extensive wide porches 7. Small sash or casement windows with many panes 8. Round or polygonal shingled towers