arranged the outbuildings in long, low wings branching out from the
main building and enclosing a large rectangular court area.
VILLA ROTONDAPalladio’s most famous villa, Villa Rotonda
(FIG. 22-29), near Vicenza, is exceptional because the architect did
not build it for an aspiring gentleman farmer but for a retired mon-
signor who wanted a villa for social events. Palladio planned and de-
signed Villa Rotonda, located on a hilltop, as a kind ofbelvedere(liter-
ally “beautiful view”; in architecture, a structure with a view of the
countryside or the sea), without the usual wings of secondary build-
ings. It has a central plan (FIG. 22-30) with four identical facades and
projecting porches oriented to the four compass points. Each facade of
the Villa Rotonda resembles a Roman Ionic temple. In placing a tradi-
tional temple porch in front of a dome-covered interior, Palladio
doubtless had the Pantheon (FIG. 10-49) in mind as a model. But, as
Bramante did in his Tempietto (FIG. 22-22), Palladio transformed his
model into a new design that has no parallel in antiquity. Each of the
villa’s four porches can be used as a platform for enjoying a different
view of the surrounding landscape. In this design, the central dome-
covered rotunda logically functions as a kind of circular platform
from which visitors may turn in any direction for the preferred view.
The result is a building with functional parts systematically related to
one another in terms of calculated mathematical relationships. Villa
Rotonda embodies all the qualities of self-sufficiency and formal com-
pleteness most Renaissance architects sought.
SAN GIORGIO MAGGIOREOne of the most dramatically
placed buildings in Venice is San Giorgio Maggiore (FIG. 22-31), di-
rectly across the Grand Canal from Piazza San Marco. Dissatisfied
with earlier solutions to the problem of integrating a high central
nave and lower aisles into a unified facade design, Palladio solved it
by superimposing a tall and narrow classical porch on a low broad
one. This solution reflects the building’s interior arrangement (FIG.
22-32) and in that sense is strictly logical, but the intersection of
two temple facades is irrational and ambiguous, consistent with con-
temporaneous developments in Mannerist architecture, discussed
22-31Andrea Palladio,aerial view of
San Giorgio Maggiore, Venice, Italy, begun
1566.
Dissatisfied with earlier solutions to the
problem of integrating a high central nave
and lower aisles into a unified facade,
Palladio superimposed a tall and narrow
classical porch on a low broad one.
22-32Andrea Palladio,interior of San
Giorgio Maggiore, Venice, Italy, begun 1566.
In contrast to the somewhat irrational
intersection of two temple facades on the
exterior of San Giorgio Maggiore, Palladio’s
interior is strictly logical, consistent with
classical architectural theory.
High and Late Renaissance 603
22-31A
SANSOVINO,
Mint and
Library, Venice,
begun 1536.