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APPENDIX.
A.
PRIMITIVE
GREEK ARCHITECTURE.--The
researches of
Schliemann
commented
by Schuchardt, of Dörpfeld, Stamakis,
Tsoundas, Perrot, and others,
in
Troy,
Mycenæ, and Tiryns, and the more recent
discoveries of Evans at Gnossus,
in
Crete,
have greatly extended our
knowledge of the prehistoric art of
Greece and the
Mediterranean
basin, and established many points of
contact on the one hand with
ancient
Egyptian and Phoenician art, and on the other, with
the art of historic
Greece.
They have proved the existence of an
active and flourishing
commerce
between
Egypt and the Mediterranean shores and
Aegean islands more than
2000
B.C.,
and of a flourishing material
civilization in those islands and on the
mainland
of
Greece, borrowing much, but not
everything, from Egypt. While the
origin of the
Doric
order in the structural methods of the
pre-Homeric architecture of Tiryns
and
Mycenæ,
as set forth by Dörpfeld and by Perrot
and Chipiez, can hardly be
regarded
as
proved in all details, since much of the
argument advanced for this
derivation
rests
on more or less conjectural
restorations of the existing remains, it
seems to be
fairly
well established that the Doric order,
and historic Greek architecture
in
general,
trace their genesis in large
measure back in direct line
to this prehistoric art.
The
remarkable feature of this early
architecture is the apparently complete
absence
of
temples. Fortifications, houses,
palaces, and tombs make up the ruins thus
far
discovered,
and seem to indicate clearly the
derivation of the temple-type of
later
Greek
art from the primitive house, consisting
of a hall or megaron
with
four
columns
about the central hearth
(whence no doubt, the atrium and
peristyle of
Roman
houses, through their Greek intermediary
prototypes) and a porch or
aithousa, with or
without columns in
antis,
opening directly into the megaron,
or
indirectly
through an ante-room called the prodomos.
Here we have the prototypes
of
the
Greek temple in
antis, with
its naos
having
interior columns, whether
roofed over
or
hypæthral. It is probable also that the
evidently liberal use of
timber for many of
the
structural details led in
time to many of the forms later
developed in stone in the
entablature
of the Doric order. But it is hard to
discover, as Dörpfeld would have
it,
in
the slender Mycenæan columns with their
inverted taper, the prototype of
the
massive
Doric column with its upward taper. The
Mycenæan column was
evidently
derived
from wooden models; the sturdy Doric
column--the earliest being the
most
massive--seems
plainly derived from stone or rubble
piers, and thus to have
come
from
a different source from the Mycenæan
forms.
The
gynecæum, or
women's apartments, the men's
apartments, and the bath were in
these
ancient palaces grouped in
varying relations about the
megaron: their
plan,
purpose,
and arrangement are clearly
revealed in the ruins of Tiryns, where they
are
more
complete and perfect than either at Troy
or Mycenæ.
B.
CAMPANILES
IN ITALY.--Reference
is made on page 264 to the towers
or
campaniles
of the Italian Gothic style and period,
and six of these are
specifically
mentioned;
and on page 305 mention is also
made of those of the Renaissance
in
Italy.
The number and importance of the Italian campaniles
and the interest
attaching
to their origin and design, warrant a
more extended notice than
has been
assigned
them in the pages cited.
The
oldest of these bell-towers
appear to be those adjoining the two
churches of San
Apollinare
in and near Ravenna, and date
presumably from the sixth century.
They
are
plain circular towers with few and
small openings, except in the
uppermost story,
where
larger arched openings
permit the issue of the sound of the
bells. This type,
which
might have been developed into a very
interesting form of tower, does
not
seem
to have been imitated. It
was at Rome, and not till the ninth or tenth
century,
that
the campanile became a recognized
feature of church architecture. It
was
invariably
treated as a structure distinct from the
church, and was built of brick
upon
a square plan, rising with little or no
architectural adornment to a
height
usually
of a hundred feet or more, and furnished
with but a few small openings
below
the belfry stage, where a
pair of coupled arched windows
separated by a
simple
column opened from each face of the
tower. Above these windows a
pyramidal
roof of low pitch terminated the tower. In
spite of their simplicity of
design
these Roman bell-towers
often possess a noticeable
grace of proportions, and
furnish
the prototype of many of the more
elaborate campaniles erected
during the
Middle
Ages in other central and north
Italian cities. The towers of
Sta. Maria in
Cosmedin,
Sta. Maria in Trastevere, and S. Giorgio
in Velabro are examples of
this
type.
Most of the Roman examples date from the
eleventh and twelfth centuries.
In
other cities, the campanile
was treated with some
variety of form and decoration,
as
well as of material. In Lombardy and
Venetia the square red-brick
shaft of the
Venice,
and an arcaded cornice not infrequently
crowns the structure. The
openings
at
the top may be three or four in number on each
face, and even the plan is
sometimes
octagonal or circular. The brick
octagonal campanile of S.
Gottardo at
Milan
is one of the finest Lombard church
towers. At Verona the brick
tower on the
Piazza
dell' Erbe and that of S. Zeno are
conspicuous; but every important town
of
northern
Italy possesses one or more
examples of these structures
dating from the
eleventh,
twelfth, or thirteenth century.
Undoubtedly
the three most noted
bell-towers in Italy are those of
Venice, Pisa, and
Florence.
The great Campanile
of
St.
Mark at
Venice, first begun in 874,
carried
higher
in the twelfth and fourteenth centuries, and finally
completed in the sixteenth
century
with the marble belvedere and wooden
spire so familiar in pictures
of
Venice,
was formerly the highest of all church
campaniles in Italy, measuring
approximately
325 feet to the summit. But this superb
historic monument, weakened
by
causes not yet at this writing fully understood, fell
in sudden ruin on the 14th of
July,
1902, to the great loss not only of
Venice, but of the world of art, though
fortunately
without injuring the neighboring
buildings on the Piazza and Piazzetta
of
St.
Mark. Since then the campanile of S.
Stefano, in the same city, has
been
dates
from 1174, and is unique in its plan and
its exterior treatment
with
superposed
arcades. Begun apparently as a
leaning tower, it seems to have
increased
this
lean to a dangerous point, by the
settling of its foundations
during construction,
as
its upper stages were
made to deviate slightly
towards the vertical from the
inclination
of the lower portion. It has
always served rather as a
watch-tower and
belvedere
than as a bell-tower. The Campanile
adjoining
the Duomo at Florence
is
described
on p. 263 and illustrated in Fig.
154,
and does not require further
notice
here.
The black-and-white banded towers of
Sienna, Lucca, and Pistoia, and
the
octagonal
lanterns crowning those of
Verona and Mantua, also referred to in
the text
on
p. 264, need here only be mentioned
again as illustrating the variety of
treatment
of
these Italian towers.
The
Renaissance architects developed new
types of campanile, and in such
variety
that
they can only be briefly referred to.
Some, like a brick tower at
Perugia, are
simple
square towers with pilasters;
more often engaged columns
and entablatures
mark
the several stories, and the upper
portion is treated either with an
octagonal
lantern
or with diminishing stages, and sometimes
with a spire. Of the latter
class
the
best example is that of S. Biagio, at
Montepulciano,--one of the two designed
to
flank
the façade of Ant. da S. Gallo's
beautiful church of that name. One or two
good
late
examples are to be found at Naples. Of
the more massive square type
there are
examples
in the towers of S. Michele, Venice; of
the cathedral at Ferrara, Sta.
Chiara
at
Naples, and Sta. Maria dell' Anima--one
of the earliest--at Rome. The
most
complete
and perfect of these square
belfries of the Renaissance is that of
the
Campidoglio
at
Rome, by Martino Lunghi, dating from the
end of the sixteenth
century,
which groups so admirably with the
palaces of the Capitol.
C.
BRAMANTE'S
WORKS.--A
more or less animated
controversy has
arisen
regarding
the authenticity of many of the works
attributed to Bramante, and the
tendency
has of late been to deny him any part
whatever in several of the
most
important
of these works. The first of
these to be given a changed
assignment was
the
church of the Consolazione at Todi, now believed to be
by Cola di Caprarola; and
it
is now denied by many investigators that
either the Cancelleria or the
Giraud
palace
is his work, or any one of two or three
smaller houses in Rome
showing a
somewhat
similar architectural treatment. The
evidence adduced in support of
this
denial
is rather speculative and critical than
documentary, but is not without
weight.
The
date 1495 carved on a doorway of the
Cancelleria palace is thought to forbid
its
attribution
to Bramante, who is not known to have
come to Rome till 1503; and
there
is a lack of positive evidence of
his authorship of the Giraud
palace and the
other
houses which seem to be by the same hand
as the Cancelleria. To the
advocates
of
this view there is not enough resemblance
in style between this group of
buildings
and
his acknowledged work either in Milan or
in the Vatican to warrant their
being
attributed
to him.
It
must, however, be remarked, that this
notable group of works,
stamped with the
marks
and even the mannerisms of a strong
personality, reveal in their
unknown
author
gifts amounting to genius, and
heretofore deemed not unworthy of
Bramante.
It
is almost inconceivable that they should
have been designed by a mere
beginner
previously
utterly unknown and forgotten soon after.
It is incumbent upon those who
deny
the attribution to Bramante to find
another name, if possible, on which
to
fasten
the credit of these works.
Accordingly, they have been
variously attributed to
Alberti
(who died in 1472) or his followers; to
Bernardo di Lorenzo, and to
other
later
fifteenth-century artists. The difficulty
here is to discover any name that
fits the
conditions
even as well as Bramante's; for the
supposed author must have been
in
Rome
between 1495 and 1505, and his other
works must be at least as much
like
these
as were Bramante's. No name
has thus far been found satisfactory to
careful
critics;
and the alternative theory, that there
existed in Rome, before
Bramante's
coming,
a group of architects unknown to later
fame, working in a common
style and
capable
of such a masterpiece as the Cancelleria,
does not harmonize with the
generally
accepted facts of Renaissance art
history. Moreover, the comparison
of
these
works with Bramante's Milanese work on
the one hand and his great
Court of
the
Belvedere in the Vatican on the other,
yields, to some critics,
conclusions quite
opposed
to those of the advocates of another
authorship than Bramante's.
The
controversy must be considered for the
present as still open. There
are manifest
difficulties
with either of the two opposed views, and
these can hardly be
eliminated,
except
by the discovery of documents not now known to
exist, whose testimony
will
be
recognized as unimpeachable.
D.
L'ART
NOUVEAU.--Since
1896, and particularly since the Paris
Exposition of
1900,
a movement has manifested
itself in France and Belgium, and
spread to
Germany
and Austria and even measurably to
England, looking towards a
more
personal
and original style of decorative and
architectural design, in which the
traditions
and historic styles of the past
shall be ignored. This
movement has
received
from its adherents and the public the
name of "L'Art Nouveau," or,
according
to some, "L'Art Moderne"; but this name
must not be held to connote
either
a really new style or a fundamentally new
principle in art. Indeed, it may
be
questioned
whether any clearly-defined body of
principles whatever underlies
the
movement,
or would be acknowledged equally by all
its adherents. It appears to be
a
reaction
against a too slavish
adherence to traditional forms and
methods of design,
a
striving to ignore or forget the
past rather than a reaching out
after any well-
understood,
positive end; as such, it
possesses the negative strength of
protest rather
than
the affirmative strength of a vital
principle. Its lack of cohesion is
seen in the
division
of its adherents into groups,
some looking to nature for
inspiration, while
others
decry this as a mistaken quest;
some seeking to emphasize
structural lines,
and
others to ignore them altogether. All,
however, are united in the
avoidance of
commonplace
forms and historic styles, and this
preoccupation has developed
an
amazing
amount of originality and individualism of
style, frequently reaching
the
extreme
of eccentricity. The results have
therefore been, as might be
expected,
extremely
varied in merit, ranging from the
most refined and reserved in
style to the
most
harshly bizarre and extravagant. As a
rule, they have been most
successful in
small
and semi-decorative objects--jewelry,
silverware, vases, and small
furniture;
and
one most desirable feature
of the movement has been the
stimulus it has given
(especially
in France and England), to the
organization and activity of
"arts-and-
crafts"
societies which occupy themselves with
the encouragement of the
decorative
and
industrial arts and the diffusion of an
improved taste. In the field of the
larger
objects
of design, in which the dominance of
traditional form and of structural
considerations
is proportionally more imperious, the
struggle to evade
these
restrictions
becomes more difficult, and
results usually in more
obvious and
disagreeable
eccentricities, which the greater size
and permanence of the object tend
further
to exaggerate. The least successful
achievements of the movement
have
accordingly
been in architecture. The buildings
designed by its most fervent
disciples
(e.g.
the
Pavillon Bleu at the Exposition of 1900,
the Castel Béranger, Paris,
by
H.
Guimard, the
houses of the artist colony at
Darmstadt, and others) are for
the
most
part characterized by extreme stiffness,
eccentricity, or ugliness. The
requirements
of construction and of human habitation
cannot easily be met without
sometimes
using the forms which past
experience has developed for the
same ends;
and
the negation of precedent is not the
surest path to beauty or even
reasonableness
of
design. It is interesting to notice that
in the intermediate field of
furniture-design
some
of the best French productions
recall the style of Louis XV.,
modified by
Japanese
ideas and spirit. This
singular but not unpleasing combination
is less
surprising
when we reflect that the style of Louis
XV. was itself a protest
against the
formalism
of the heavy classic architecture of
preceding reigns, and achieved
its
highest
successes in the domain of furniture and
interior decoration.
It
may be fair to credit the new movement
with one positive characteristic in
its
prevalent
regard for line, especially for the
effect of long and swaying
lines, whether
in
the contours or ornamentation of an
object. This is especially
noticeable in the
Belgian
work, and in that of the Viennese "Secessionists," who
have, however,
carried
eccentricity to a further point of extravagance than
any others.
Whether
"L'Art Nouveau" will ever produce
permanent results time alone
can show.
Its
present vogue is probably
evanescent and it cannot claim to
have produced a
style;
but it seems likely to exert on
European architecture an influence,
direct and
indirect,
not unlike that of the Néo-Grec movement of 1830 in
France, but even
more
lasting and beneficial. It has
already begun to break the hold of
rigid classical
tradition
in design; and recent buildings,
especially in Germany and Austria,
like the
works
of the brilliant Otto
Wagner in
Vienna, show a pleasing freedom of
personal
touch
without undue striving after eccentric
novelty. Doubtless in French and
other
European
architecture the same result will in
time manifest itself.
The
search for novelty and the desire to
dispense wholly with historic forms
of
design
which are the chief marks of the Art
Nouveau, were emphatically
displayed in
many
of the remarkable buildings of the Paris
Exhibition
of 1900, in which
a
striking
fertility and facility of design in the
decorative details made
more
conspicuous
the failure to improve upon the
established precedents of
architectural
style
in the matters of proportion, scale,
general composition, and contour. As
usual
the
metallic construction of these
buildings was almost without
exception admirable,
and
the decorative details, taken by
themselves, extremely clever and
often beautiful,
but
the combined result was not
satisfactory.
In
the United States the movement has not
found a firm foothold because there
has
been
no dominant, enslaving tradition to
protest against. Not a few of the ideas,
not
a
little of the spirit of the movement may be
recognized in the work of
individual
architects
and decorative artists in the United
States, executed years
before the
movement
took recognizable form in Europe: and
American decorative design
has
generally
been, at least since 1880 or 1885,
sufficiently free, individual
and
personal,
to render unnecessary and impossible any
concerted movement of
artistic
revolt
against slavery to
precedent.
E.
RECENT
AMERICAN ARCHITECTURE.--Architectural
activity in the United
States
continues to share in the general
prosperity which has marked the
years since
1898,
and this activity has by no means
been confined to industrial and
commercial
architecture.
Indeed, while the erection of "sky
scrapers" or excessively lofty
office-
buildings
has continued to be a feature of this
activity in the great
commercial
centres,
the most notable architectural
enterprises of recent years
have been in the
field
of educational buildings, both in the
East and West. In 1898 a
great
international
competition resulted in the selection of
the design of Mr. E.
Bénard of
Paris
for a magnificent group of buildings for
the University
of California on a
scale
of
unexampled grandeur, and the erection of
this colossal project has
been begun. An
almost
equally ambitious project, by a firm of
Philadelphia architects, has
been
adopted
for the Washington University at St.
Louis; and many other universities
and
colleges
have either added
extensively to their existing
buildings or planned an
entire
rebuilding
on new designs. Among these the
national military and naval academies
at
West
Point and
Annapolis
take
the first rank in the extent and splendor
of the
projected
improvements. Museums and libraries
have also been erected or
begun in
various
cities, and the New
York Public Library, now
building, will rank in cost and
beauty
with those already erected in
Boston and Washington.
In
other departments mention
should be made
of
recent Federal buildings
(custom-
houses,
post-offices, and court-houses)
erected
under
the provisions of the Tarsney
act
from designs secured by competition
among
the
leading architects of the country;
among
those the New
York Custom House
is
the most important, but
other
buildings,
at Washington, Indianapolis, and
elsewhere, are also
conspicuous, and
many
of them worthy of high praise. The tendency to
award the designing of
important
public buildings, such as
State capitols, county court houses, city
halls,
libraries,
and hospitals, by competition instead of
by personal and political favor,
has
resulted
in a marked improvement in the quality of
American public
architecture.
F.
THE
ERECHTHEUM: RECENT
INVESTIGATIONS.--During the
past two years,
extensive
repairs and partial restorations of the
Erechtheum at Athens,
undertaken
by
the Greek Archæological Society,
have afforded opportunities for a new
and
thoroughgoing
study of the existing portions of the
building and of the surrounding
ruins.
In these investigations a prominent part
has been borne by Mr.
Gorham
P.
Stevens, representing the Archæological
Institute of America, to whom must be
credited,
among other things, the
demonstration of the existence, in the
east wall of
the
original structure, of two windows
previously unknown. Other peculiarities
of
design
and construction were also
discovered, which add greatly to the
interest of the
building.
These investigations are
reported in the American
Journal of Archæology,
Second
Series; Journal
of the Archæological Institute of
America, Vol. X., No.
1, et
seq.
The
illustrations, Figures 35 and 36, are, by
Mr. Stevens' courtesy, based
upon,
though
not reproductions of, his original
drawings.
GLOSSARY
OF
TERMS NOT DEFINED IN THE
TEXT.
ALCAZAR (Span.,
from Arabic Al
Kasr), a
palace or castle, especially of a
governing
official.
ARCHIVOLT,
a band or group of mouldings
decorating the wall-face of an arch; or
a
transverse
arch projecting slightly from the
surface of a barrel or groined
vault.
ASTYLAR,
without columns.
BALNEA,
a Roman bathing establishment,
less extensive than the thermæ.
BEL ETAGE,
the principal story of a building,
containing the reception rooms
and
saloons;
usually the second story
(first above the ground
story).
BROKEN ENTABLATURE, an entablature which
projects forward over each
column or
pilaster,
returning back to the wall and running
along with diminished
projection
CANTONED PIERS, piers adorned with
columns or pilasters at the corners or on
the
outer
faces.
CARTOUCHE (Fr.),
an ornament shaped like a
shield or oval. In Egyptian
hieroglyphics,
the
oval encircling the name of a
king.
CAVETTO,
a concave, quarter-round
moulding.
CHEVRON,
a V-shaped ornament.
CHRYSELEPHANTINE, of ivory and gold; used of
statues in which the nude portions
are
of
ivory and the draperies of gold.
CONSOLE,
a large scroll-shaped bracket or
ornament, having its
broadest curve at the
bottom.
CORINTHIANESQUE, resembling the Corinthian;
used of capitals having
corner-volutes
and
acanthus leaves, but combined
otherwise than in the classic Corinthian
type.
EMPAISTIC,
made of, or overlaid with, sheet-metal
beaten or hammered into
decorative
patterns.
EXEDRÆ,
curved seats of stone;
niches or recesses, sometimes of
considerable size,
provided
with seats for the public.
FENESTRATION,
the whole system or arrangement of windows and
openings in an
architectural
composition.
FOUR-PART. A four-part vault is a groined vault
formed by the intersection of two
barrel
vaults. Its diagonal edges or
groins
divide
it into four sections, triangular
in
plan,
each called a compartment.
GIGANTOMACHIA, a group or composition
representing the mythical combat
between
the
gods and the giants.
HALF-TIMBERED,
constructed with a timber framework
showing externally, and
filled
in
with masonry or brickwork.
IMAUM, imâm, a
Mohammedan priest.
KAABAH,
the sacred shrine at Meccah, a
nearly cubical structure hung with
black
cloth.
KARAFAH,
a region in Cairo containing the
so-called tombs of the
Khalifs.
LACONICUM,
the sweat-room in a Roman bath;
usually of domical design in the
larger
thermæ.
MEZZANINE,
a low, intermediate story.
MUEDDIN,
a Mohammedan mosque-official who calls to
prayer.
NARTHEX,
a porch or vestibule running across the
front of a basilica or church.
NEO-GOTHIC,
in
a style which seeks to revive and
adapt or apply to modern
uses
the
forms of the Middle Ages.
NEO-MEDIÆVAL,
OCULUS,
a circular opening, especially in the
crown of a dome.
OGEE ARCH,
one composed of two juxtaposed
S-shaped or wavy curves, meeting in
a
point
at the top.
PALÆSTRA,
an establishment among the ancient
Greeks for physical
training.
PAVILION (Fr.
pavillon),
ordinarily a light open structure of
ornate design. As applied
to
architectural composition, a projecting
section of a façade, usually
rectangular in
plan,
and having its own distinct
mass of roof.
QUARRY ORNAMENT, any ornament covering a
surface with two series of
reticulated
lines
enclosing approximately quadrangular
spaces or meshes.
QUATREFOIL,
with four leaves or foils;
composed of four arcs of circles
meeting in
cusps
pointing inward.
QUOINS,
slightly projecting blocks of
stone, alternately long and
short, decorating or
strengthening
a corner or angle of a
façade.
REVETMENT,
a veneering or sheathing.
RUSTICATION,
treatment of the masonry with blocks
having roughly broken faces,
or
with
deeply grooved or bevelled
joints.
SOFFIT,
the under-side of an architrave, beam,
arch, or corona.
SPANDRIL,
the triangular wall-space between two
contiguous arches.
SQUINCH,
a bit of conical vaulting filling in the
angles of a square so as to provide
an
octagonal
or circular base for a dome or
lantern.
STOA, an open colonnade for
public resort.
TEPIDARIUM,
the hot-water hall or chamber of a Roman
bath.
TYMPANUM,
the flat space comprised between the
horizontal and raking cornices of
a
pediment,
or between a lintel and the arch over
it.
VOUSSOIR,
any one of the radial stones
composing an arch.
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