Online Encyclopedia

GOTTFRIED SEMPER (1803–1879)

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Originally appearing in Volume V24, Page 632 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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GOTTFRIED

SEMPER (1803–1879)  , German architect and writer on
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art, was born at
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Altona on the 29th of November 1803 . His
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father intended him for the law, but his impulses towards an
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artistic career were irresistible . His early mastery of classical literature led him to the study of classic monuments in classic lands, while his equally conspicuous talent for mathematics gave him the
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laws of form and proportion in architectural design . At the university of
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Gottingen he fell under the influence of K . O . Muller . His architectural
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education was carried out successively in
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Hamburg, where later, upon his return from
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Greece, he built the Donner Museum, in Berlin, in
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Dresden, in Paris under Gau and in Munich under Gartner; afterwards he visited Italy and Greece . While in Greece he made observations which showed that in ancient architecture the use of polychrome was frequent . In the diffusion of this
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discovery he was much aided by Jacques Ignace Hittorff . In 1834 he was appointed professor of architecture in Dresden, and during fifteen years received many important commissions from the Saxon court . He built the opera-house in Renaissance style, the new museum and picture gallery, and a
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Byzantine synagogue . In 1848 his turbulent spirit led him to side with the revolution against his royal
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patron; he furnished the rebels with military plans, and was eventually driven into exile .

Semper came to
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London at the time of the
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Great
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Exhibition of 1851, and Prince Albert found him an able ally in carrying out his plans . He was appointed teacher of the principles of decoration; his lectures in
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manuscript are preserved in the art library, South
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Kensington . He was also employed by the prince consort to prepare a design for the Kensington Museum; and he made the drawings for the Wellington funeral car . In 1853 Semper
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left London for Zurich on his appointment as professor of architecture, and with a commission to build in that
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town the polytechnic school and the hospital . He also built the
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observatory and the railway station in that city . Here, too, he made plans for a large theatre in Rio Janeiro . In 187o he was called to Vienna to assist in the great architectural projects since carried out around the Ring . A
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year later, after an exile of over twenty years, he received a summons to Dresden, on the rebuilding of the first opera-house, which had been destroyed by fire in 1869; his second design was a modification of the first . The closing years of his
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life were passed in
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comparative tranquillity between Venice and Rome, and in the latter city he died on the ,15th of May 1879 . In 1892 a
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bronze statue of Semper, by Johannes Schelling, was unveiled on the Briihlsche Terrasse in Dresden . Semper's style was a growth from the classic orders through the
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Italian Cinque Cento . He forsook the
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base and rococo forms he found rooted in Germany, and, reverting to the best historic examples, fashioned a purer Renaissance .

He stands as a

leader in the practice of polychrome, since widely diffused, and by his writings and example did much to reinstate the ancient union between architecture, sculpture and
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painting . Among his numerous
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literary
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works are Uber Polychromie u. ihren Unsprung (1851), Die Anwendung der Farben in der Architektur u . Plastik bei den Allen, Der Stil in den technischen u. tektonischen Kiinsten (186o-1863) . His Notes of Lectures on
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Practical Art in Metals and Hard Materials: its Technology,
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History and Style, were left in MS .

End of Article: GOTTFRIED SEMPER (1803–1879)
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