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dc.coverage.spatialSite: Vicenza, Veneto, Italyen_US
dc.coverage.temporal1542-1556 (creation)en_US
dc.creatorPalladio, Andreaen_US
dc.creatorGiulio Romanoen_US
dc.date1542-1556en_US
dc.date.accessioned2013-03-11T18:14:51Z
dc.date.available2013-03-11T18:14:51Z
dc.date.issued1542-1556en_US
dc.identifier198974en_US
dc.identifier.otherarchrefid: 1178en_US
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/1721.3/106735
dc.descriptionView looking up the east façade; Also in 1542 Palladio began rebuilding the Palazzo Thiene (only partly completed) in Vicenza. Scholars are not unanimous in attributing this building to Palladio, although Palladio himself claimed authorship of it by including it in his Quattro libri, an attribution supported by Vasari. For some scholars, however, Vincenzo Scamozzi's assertion that the building was originally started by the Roman architect Giulio Romano, and the rusticated treatment of the parts of the facade that were executed, are reason enough to attribute the building to the latter. The structure is a massive palace rising directly from ground-level and recalling a fortress rather than a Renaissance town palace. The rock-faced rusticated masonry of the ground floor, in which the windows look as if they are cut out, is continued in smoother and shallower form on the piano nobile. The upper storey is articulated by a series of pilasters in a regular rhythm and enlivened by windows surmounted alternately by triangular and segmental pediments. The columns flanking the windows are clad with small blocks that interrupt the curvature of the column, a further allusion to the fortress quality of the palace. The tripartite composition of the whole consists of a sequence of façade, atrium and inner courtyard, each expressed as clearly distinct zones. The richly varied forms designed by Palladio for the axially linked room plans in the self-contained wings of the palace are derived directly from the architecture of Roman baths. Source: Grove Art Online; http://www.groveart.com/ (accessed 1/26/2008)en_US
dc.format.mediumstoneen_US
dc.rights© Scott Gilchrist, Archivision, Inc.en_US
dc.subjectarchitectural exteriorsen_US
dc.subjectRenaissanceen_US
dc.titlePalazzo Thieneen_US
dc.typeimageen_US
dc.rights.accessLicensed for educational and research use by the MIT community onlyen_US
dc.identifier.vendorcode1A1-PA-PT-A2en_US
vra.culturalContextItalianen_US
vra.techniqueconstruction (assembling)en_US
vra.worktypepalazzoen_US
dc.contributor.displayattributed to Andrea Palladio (Italian architect, 1508-1580); attributed to Giulio Romano (Italian architect, 1499-1546)en_US


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