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Architectural Design, Europe - Italian Architecture, Individual Architects, Designers, & Planners, Engineering & Computer Technology, Domestic Architecture
Possible Palladian Villas: (Plus a Few Instructively Impossible Ones) by George Hersey β€” book cover

Possible Palladian Villas: (Plus a Few Instructively Impossible Ones)

by George Hersey, Richard Freedman
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Overview

The villas of Andrea Palladio have been among the most influential buildings in history. Drawing on the architect's original published legacy of forty-odd designs, George Hersey and Richard Freedman reveal the rigorous geometric rules by which Palladio conceived these structures. Where most earlier attempts to analyze the villas are mere lists of numbers and ratios that ignore space distribution, the present rules produce actual designs. Using a computer, the authors test each rule in every possible application, establishing a degree of validity not possible in ad hoc analyses. Progressing from the architect's most obvious to his subtlest ideas, the computer ultimately creates villa plans and facades that are stylistically indistinguishable from those of Palladio himself.Possible Palladian Villas opens the way to similar analyses of other such
"paradigmatic" designs, whether Chinese screens, Greek temples, baroque churches, or Frank Lloyd Wright's Prairie Houses. In fact a new approach to architectural history emerges: we can study designs that a given master might have produced but did not.
Palladio's actual buildings, along with those of his generations of imitators, are set into the context not only of a new theory but of a new type of theory.Along with the Macintosh disk that runs the program, Possible Palladian Villas will fascinate the design community and students of architectural style, symmetry, and geometry. It will fill architectural historians with bracing dismay.George Hersey is Professor of the History of Art at Yale University. Richard Freedman, who designed the computer program, is a product marketer working on MS-DOS at the Microsoft Corporation.

Synopsis

George Hersey and Richard Freedman reveal the rigorous geometric rules by which Palladio conceived the most influential buildings in history.

About the Author, George Hersey

George Hersey is Emeritus Professor of Art History at Yale University. He is the author of numerous books, including The Evolution of Allure: Sexual Selection from the Medici Venus to the Incredible Hulk (MIT Press, 1996) and The Lost Meaning of Classical Architecture: Speculations on Ornament from Vitruvius to Venturi (MIT Press, 1988).

Richard Freedman, who designed the computer program, is a product marketer working on MS-DOS at the Microsoft Corporation.

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Book Details

Published
August 1, 1992
Publisher
MIT Press
Pages
198
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780262082105

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