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See also: Italian architect, was See also: born in See also: Vicenza on the 3oth of See also: November 1518
.
The See also: works of See also: Vitruvius and Alberti were studied by him at an early See also: period, and his student See also: life was spent in See also: Rome, where he was taken by
his See also: patron Count Trissino
.
In 1547 he returned to Vicenza, where he designed a very large number of See also: fine buildings—among the chief being the Palazzo della Ragione, with two storeys of open arcades of the Tuscan and Ionic orders, and the Barbarano, Porti and Chieregati palaces
.
Most of these buildings look better on paper than in reality, as they are mainly built of brick, covered with stucco, now in a very dilapidated condition; but this does not affect the merit of their design, as See also: Palladio intended them to have been executed in See also: stone
.
See also: Pope See also: Paul III. sent for him to Rome to report upon the See also: state of St See also: Peter's
.
In Venice, too, Palladio built many stately churches and palaces, such as S
.
Giorgio Maggiore, the Capuchin See also: church, and some large palaces on the
See also: Grand Canal
.
His last See also: great See also: work was the Teatro Olimpico at Vicenza, which was finished, though not altogether after the See also: original design, by his pupil and See also: fellow citizen Scamozzi
.
In addition to his See also: town buildings Palladio designed many country villas in various parts of See also: northern See also: Italy
.
The See also: villa of Capra is perhaps the finest of these, and has frequently been imitated
.
Palladio was .a great student of classical literature, and published in 1595 an edition of Caesar's Commentaries with notes
.
His I quattro libri dell' architectura, first published at Venice in 1570, has passed into countless See also: editions, and been translated into every See also: European language
.
The original edition is a small folio, richly illustrated with well-executed full-page woodcuts of plans, elevations, and details of buildings—chiefly eitherSee also: ancient See also: Roman temples or else palaces designed and built by himself
.
Among many others, an edition with notes was published in See also: England by Inigo See also: Jones, most of whose works; and especially the palace of
See also: Whitehall, of which only the banqueting See also: room remains, owed much to Palladio's inspiration
.
The See also: style adopted and partially invented by Palladio expressed a kind of revolt against the extreme licence both of composition and See also: ornament into which the architecture of his See also: time had fallen
.
He was fascinated by the stateliness and See also: pro-portion of the buildings of ancient Rome, and did not reflect that reproductions of these, however great their archaeological accuracy, could not but be lifeless and unsuited to the wants of the 16th century
.
Palladio's carefully measured drawings of ancient buildings are now of great value, as in many cases the buildings have altogether or in See also: part ceased to exist
.
AUTHORITIEs.—Montanari, Vita di See also: Andrea Palladio (1749) ; Rigato, Osservazioni sopra Andrea Palladio (1811); Magrini, Memorie intorno la vita di Andrea Palladio (1845); Milizia, Memorie degli architetti, ii
.
35–54 (1781); See also: Symonds, See also: Renaissance in Italy—Fine Arts, pp
.
94–99; See also: Zanella, Vita di Andrea Palladio (Milan, 1880) ; Barichella, Vita di Andrea Palladio (Lonigo, 1880)
.
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