Focus on the Florence Cathedral Ghiberti & Brunelleschi.

18
Focus on the Florence Cathedral Ghiberti & Brunelleschi

Transcript of Focus on the Florence Cathedral Ghiberti & Brunelleschi.

Page 1: Focus on the Florence Cathedral Ghiberti & Brunelleschi.

Focus on the Florence Cathedral

Ghiberti&

Brunelleschi

Page 2: Focus on the Florence Cathedral Ghiberti & Brunelleschi.

The Baptistry Doors• A contest was held for a

design for the doors of the Florence cathedral

• 34 judges (including Lorenzo Medici) could not agree on a winner so Brunelleschi and Ghiberti were awarded the contract together.

• Brunelleschi refused and left town.

Page 3: Focus on the Florence Cathedral Ghiberti & Brunelleschi.

Ghiberti(1381-1455)

• Artist in metal work

• Ghiberti created scenes in graded relief

• Ghiberti used landscapes and architectural forms to show perspective

Page 4: Focus on the Florence Cathedral Ghiberti & Brunelleschi.

•contained 10 squares, or reliefs

•Michelangelo called them the Doors of Paradise

Page 5: Focus on the Florence Cathedral Ghiberti & Brunelleschi.

•When he finished Ghiberti was asked to do another set of doors.

•They depict the events of Christ’s life and the events leading to His life.

Page 6: Focus on the Florence Cathedral Ghiberti & Brunelleschi.
Page 7: Focus on the Florence Cathedral Ghiberti & Brunelleschi.

Filippo Brunelleschi (1377 – 1446)

Sculptor and architect

Page 8: Focus on the Florence Cathedral Ghiberti & Brunelleschi.
Page 9: Focus on the Florence Cathedral Ghiberti & Brunelleschi.

Brunnelleschi completed the project of the dome of the Santa Maria del Fiore cathedral.

This was a complex task for the time.

Page 10: Focus on the Florence Cathedral Ghiberti & Brunelleschi.

The cathedral was so enormous that the usual methods of fixed scaffolding from the ground could not be used.

It seemed quite impossible to roof over a space so huge without some sort of reinforcement.

Page 11: Focus on the Florence Cathedral Ghiberti & Brunelleschi.

The challenge was resolved by Brunelleschi who was an expert in the rules of perspective and mathematics, as well as being a real enthusiast for the construction techniques used by the ancient Romans.

Page 12: Focus on the Florence Cathedral Ghiberti & Brunelleschi.

He got his final inspiration from an attentive study of the cupola of the Pantheon, which had also been carried out without scaffolding and with a double wall.

Page 13: Focus on the Florence Cathedral Ghiberti & Brunelleschi.
Page 14: Focus on the Florence Cathedral Ghiberti & Brunelleschi.

Eventually he suggested announcing a competition for the project of a cupola with the following requisites:

1. had to be octagonal2. measure 46 meters in diameter at the

base3. be built without scaffolding and appear to

be at least double in sizeBrunnelleschi was quite sure that he would

win.

Page 15: Focus on the Florence Cathedral Ghiberti & Brunelleschi.

The bricks were laid on sloping beds. Before closing each ring of bricks, the workmen placed a row of bricks whose longer sides protruded with respect to the bricks resting on the conic surface. This arrangement, known as a herring-bone, displays a spiral profile.

Page 16: Focus on the Florence Cathedral Ghiberti & Brunelleschi.

To build a dome without the use of a supporting framework, each of the masonry rings that compose the dome must be completed in succession.This was the method used by Brunelleschi, and illustrated in the model of the masonry layers.

Page 17: Focus on the Florence Cathedral Ghiberti & Brunelleschi.
Page 18: Focus on the Florence Cathedral Ghiberti & Brunelleschi.