Greek
Revival architecture
Brandenburg
Gate in Berlin, Germany.
Thomas
Hamilton's design for the Royal High School, Edinburgh, completed 1829.
Klenze's
Propyläen (Gateway) in Munich, 1854–1862.
The
Yorkshire Museum designed by architect William Wilkins and officially opened in
February 1830
The Greek
Revival was an architectural movement of the late 18th and early 19th
centuries, predominantly in Northern Europe and the United States. It revived
the style of ancient Greek architecture, in particular the Greek temple, with
varying degrees of thoroughness and consistency. A product of Hellenism, it may
be looked upon as the last phase in the development of Neoclassical
architecture, which had for long mainly drawn from Roman architecture. The term
was first used by Charles Robert Cockerell in a lecture he gave as Professor of
Architecture to the Royal Academy of Arts, London in 1842.
With a
newfound access to Greece, or initially the books produced by the few who had
actually been able to visit the sites, archaeologist-architects of the period
studied the Doric and Ionic orders. In each country it touched, the style was
looked on as the expression of local nationalism and civic virtue, and freedom
from the lax detail and frivolity that was thought to characterize the
architecture of France and Italy, two countries where the style never really
took hold. This was especially the case in Britain, Germany and the United
States, where the idiom was regarded as being free from ecclesiastical and
aristocratic associations.
The taste
for all things Greek in furniture and interior design, sometimes called
Neo-Grec, was at its peak by the beginning of the 19th century, when the
designs of Thomas Hope had influenced a number of decorative styles known
variously as Neoclassical, Empire, Russian Empire, and Regency architecture in
Britain. Greek Revival architecture took a different course in a number of
countries, lasting until the Civil War in America (1860s) and even later in
Scotland.
Rediscovery
of Greece
Despite the
unbounded prestige of ancient Greece among the educated elite of Europe, there
was minimal direct knowledge of that civilization before the middle of the 18th
century. The monuments of Greek antiquity were known chiefly from Pausanias and
other literary sources. Visiting Ottoman Greece was difficult and dangerous
business prior to the period of stagnation beginning with the Great Turkish
War. Few Grand Tourists called on Athens during the first half of the 18th
century, and none made any significant study of the architectural ruins.
It would
take until the expedition funded by the Society of Dilettanti of 1751 by James
Stuart and Nicholas Revett before serious archaeological inquiry began in
earnest. Stuart and Revett's findings, published in 1762 (first volume) as The
Antiquities of Athens, along with Julien-David Le Roy's Ruines des plus
beaux monuments de la Grèce (1758) were the first accurate surveys of ancient
Greek architecture.
Meanwhile,
the rediscovery of the three relatively easily accessible Greek temples at
Paestum in southern Italy created huge interest throughout Europe, and prints
by Piranesi and others were widely circulated. Access to the originals in
Greece itself only became easier after the Greek War of Independence ended in
1832; Lord Byron's participation and death during this had brought it
additional prominence.
Britain
Following
the travels to Greece of Nicholas Revett, a Suffolk gentleman architect, and
the better remembered James Stuart in the early 1750s, intellectual curiosity
quickly led to a desire to emulate. Stuart was commissioned after his return
from Greece by George Lyttelton to produce the first Greek building in England,
the garden temple at Hagley Hall (1758–59). A number of British architects in
the second half of the century took up the expressive challenge of the Doric
from their aristocratic patrons, including Benjamin Henry Latrobe (notably at
Hammerwood Park and Ashdown House) and Sir John Soane, but it was to remain the
private enthusiasm of connoisseurs up to the first decade of the 19th century.
An early example of Greek Doric architecture (in the facade), married with a
more Palladian interior, is the Revett-designed rural church of Ayot St
Lawrence in Hertfordshire, commissioned in 1775 by Lord Lionel Lyde of the
eponymous manor. The Doric columns of this church, with their "pie-crust
crimped" details, are taken from drawings that Revett made of the Temple
of Apollo on the Cycladic island of Delos, in the collection of books that he
(and Stuart in some cases) produced, largely funded by special subscription by
the Society of Dilettanti. See more in Terry Friedman's book "The Georgian
Parish Church", Spire Books, 2004.
Façade of
the British Museum
Seen in its
wider social context, Greek Revival architecture sounded a new note of sobriety
and restraint in public buildings in Britain around 1800 as an assertion of
nationalism attendant on the Act of Union, the Napoleonic Wars, and the clamour
for political reform. It was to be William Wilkins's winning design for the
public competition for Downing College, Cambridge that announced the Greek
style was to be a dominant idiom in architecture, especially for public
buildings of this sort. Wilkins and Robert Smirke went on to build some of the most
important buildings of the era, including the Theatre Royal, Covent Garden
(1808–1809), the General Post Office (1824–1829) and the British Museum
(1823–1848), the Wilkins Building of University College London (1826–1830) and
the National Gallery (1832–1838).
Arguably
the greatest British exponent of the style was Decimus Burton.
In London,
twenty three Greek Revival Commissioners' churches were built between 1817 and
1829, the most notable being St.Pancras church by William and Henry William
Inwood. In Scotland the style was avidly adopted by William Henry Playfair,
Thomas Hamilton and Charles Robert Cockerell, who severally and jointly
contributed to the massive expansion of Edinburgh's New Town, including the
Calton Hill development and the Moray Estate. Such was the popularity of the
Doric in Edinburgh that the city now enjoys a striking visual uniformity, and
as such is sometimes whimsically referred to as "the Athens of the
North".
Edinburgh's New Town / "the Athens of the North".
Within
Regency architecture the style already competed with Gothic Revival and the
continuation of the less stringent Palladian and neoclassical styles of
Georgian architecture, the other two remaining more common for houses, both in
towns and English country houses. If it is tempting to see the Greek Revival as
the expression of Regency authoritarianism, then the changing conditions of
life in Britain made Doric the loser of the Battle of the Styles, dramatically
symbolized by the selection of Charles Barry's Gothic design for the Palace of
Westminster in 1836. Nevertheless, Greek continued to be in favour in Scotland
well into the 1870s in the singular figure of Alexander Thomson, known as
"Greek Thomson".
Germany and
France
Leo von
Klenze's Walhalla, Regensburg, Bavaria, 1842
In Germany,
Greek Revival architecture is predominantly found in two centres, Berlin and
Munich. In both locales, Doric was the court style rather than a popular
movement, and was heavily patronised by Frederick William II of Prussia and
Ludwig I of Bavaria as the expression of their desires for their respective
seats to become the capital of Germany. The earliest Greek building was the
Brandenburg Gate (1788–91) by Carl Gotthard Langhans, who modelled it on the
Propylaea. Ten years after the death of Frederick the Great, the Berlin
Akademie initiated a competition for a monument to the king that would promote
"morality and patriotism."
Friedrich
Gilly's unexecuted design for a temple raised above the Leipziger Platz caught
the tenor of high idealism that the Germans sought in Greek architecture and
was enormously influential on Karl Friedrich Schinkel and Leo von Klenze.
Schinkel was in a position to stamp his mark on Berlin after the catastrophe of
the French occupation ended in 1813; his work on what is now the Altes Museum,
Konzerthaus Berlin, and the Neue Wache transformed that city. Similarly, in
Munich von Klenze's Glyptothek and Walhalla memorial were the fulfilment of
Gilly's vision of an orderly and moral German world. The purity and seriousness
of the style was intended as an assertion of German national values and partly
intended as a deliberate riposte to France, where it never really caught on.
By
comparison, Greek Revival architecture in France was never popular with either
the state or the public. What little there is started with Charles de Wailly's
crypt in the church of St Leu-St Gilles (1773–80), and Claude Nicolas Ledoux's
Barriere des Bonshommes (1785–89). First-hand evidence of Greek architecture
was of very little importance to the French, due to the influence of
Marc-Antoine Laugier's doctrines that sought to discern the principles of the
Greeks instead of their mere practices. It would take until Labrouste's
Neo-Grec of the Second Empire for Greek Revival architecture to flower briefly
in France.
Russia
Saint
Petersburg Bourse
The style
was especially attractive in Russia, if only because they shared the Eastern Orthodox
faith with the Greeks. The historic centre of Saint Petersburg was rebuilt by
Alexander I of Russia, with many buildings giving the Greek Revival a Russian
debut. The Saint Petersburg Bourse on Vasilievsky Island has a temple front
with 44 Doric columns. Quarenghi's design for the Manege "mimics a
5th-century BC Athenian temple with a portico of eight Doric columns bearing a
pediment and bas reliefs".
Leo von
Klenze's expansion of the palace that is now the Hermitage Museum is another
example of the style.
Greece
Following
the Greek War of Independence, Romantic Nationalist ideology encouraged the use
of historically Greek architectural styles in place of Ottoman or pan-European
ones. Classical architecture was used for secular public buildings, while
Byzantine architecture was preferred for churches.
Examples of
Greek Revival architecture in Greece include the Old Royal Palace (now the home
of the Parliament of Greece), the Academy and University of Athens, the
Zappeion, and the National Library of Greece. The most prominent architects in
this style were northern Europeans such as Christian and Theophil Hansen and
Ernst Ziller and German-trained Greeks such as Stamatios Kleanthis and Panagis
Kalkos.
Rest of
Europe
Austrian
Parliament Building exterior
The style
was generally popular in northern Europe, and not in the south (except for
Greece itself), at least during the main period. Examples can be found in
Poland, Lithuania, and Finland, where the assembly of Greek buildings in
Helsinki city centre is particularly notable. At the cultural edges of Europe,
in the Swedish region of western Finland, Greek Revival motifs might be grafted
on a purely Baroque design, as in the design for Oravais Church by Jacob Rijf,
1792. A Greek Doric order, rendered in the anomalous form of pilasters,
contrasts with the hipped roof and boldly scaled cupola and lantern, of wholly
traditional Baroque inspiration.
In Austria,
one of the best examples of this style is the Parliament Building designed by
Theophil Hansen.
North
America
Second Bank
of the United States, Philadelphia, 1824.
While some
eighteenth-century Americans had feared Greek democracy
("mobocracy"), the appeal of ancient Greece rose in the 19th century
along with the growing acceptance of democracy. This made Greek architecture
suddenly more attractive in both the North and South, for differing ideological
purposes (for the North, Greek architecture symbolized the freedom of the
Greeks; in the South it symbolized the cultural glories enabled by a slave
society).[7] Thomas Jefferson owned a copy of the first volume of The Antiquities
of Athens.[8] He never practiced in the style, but he played an important role
introducing Greek Revival architecture to the United States.
In 1803,
Jefferson appointed Benjamin Henry Latrobe as surveyor of public building in
the United States, and Latrobe designed a number of important public buildings
in Washington, D.C. and Philadelphia, including work on the United States
Capitol and the Bank of Pennsylvania.
Latrobe's
design for the Capitol was an imaginative interpretation of the classical
orders not constrained by historical precedent, incorporating American motifs
such as corncobs and tobacco leaves. This idiosyncratic approach became typical
of the American attitude to Greek detailing. His overall plan for the Capitol
did not survive, though many of his interiors did. He also did notable work on
the Supreme Court interior (1806–1807), and his masterpiece was the Basilica of
the Assumption of the Virgin Mary, Baltimore (1805–1821).
Latrobe
claimed, "I am a bigoted Greek in the condemnation of the Roman
architecture", but he did not rigidly impose Greek forms. "Our
religion," he said, "requires a church wholly different from the
temple, our legislative assemblies and our courts of justice, buildings of
entirely different principles from their basilicas; and our amusements could
not possibly be performed in their theatres or amphitheatres." His circle
of junior colleagues became an informal school of Greek revivalists, and his
influence shaped the next generation of American architects.
United
States Supreme Court Building, Washington, D.C., 1935
Greek
revival architecture in North America also included attention to interior
decoration. The role of American women was critical for introducing a wholistic
style of Greek-inspired design to American interiors. Innovations such as the
Greek-inspired "sofa" and the "klismos chair" allowed both
American women and men to pose as Greeks in their homes, and also in the
numerous portraits of the period that show them lounging in Greek-inspired
furniture.
The second
phase in American Greek Revival saw the pupils of Latrobe create a monumental
national style under the patronage of banker and hellenophile Nicholas Biddle,
including such works as the Second Bank of the United States by William
Strickland (1824), Biddle's home "Andalusia" by Thomas U. Walter
(1835–1836), and Girard College, also by Walter (1833–1847). New York saw the
construction (1833) of the row of Greek temples at Sailors' Snug Harbor on Staten
Island. These had varied functions within a home for retired sailors.
From 1820
to 1850, the Greek Revival style dominated the United States, such as the
Benjamin F. Clough House in Waltham, Massachusetts. It could also be found as
far west as Springfield, Illinois. Examples of vernacular Greek Revival
continued to be built even farther west, such as in Charles City, Iowa.
This style
was very popular in the south of the US, where the Palladian colonnade was
already popular in façades, and many mansions and houses were built for the
merchants and rich plantation owners; Millford Plantation is regarded as one of
the finest Greek Revival residential examples in the country.
Other
notable American architects to use Greek Revival designs included Latrobe's
student Robert Mills, who designed the Monumental Church and the Washington
Monument, as well as George Hadfield and Gabriel Manigault.
At the same
time, the popular appetite for the Greek was sustained by architectural pattern
books, the most important of which was Asher Benjamin's The Practical House
Carpenter (1830). This guide helped create the proliferation of Greek homes
seen especially in northern New York State and in Connecticut's former Western
Reserve in northeastern Ohio.
British
colonies
In Canada,
Montreal architect John Ostell designed a number of prominent Greek Revival
buildings, including the first building on the McGill University campus and
Montreal's original Custom House, now part of the Pointe-à-Callière Museum. The
Toronto Street Post Office, completed in 1853, is another Canadian example.
Polychromy
Hittorff's
reconstruction of Temple B at Selinus, 1851.
The
discovery that the Greeks had painted their temples influenced the later
development of the style. The archaeological dig at Aegina and Bassae in
1811–1812 by Cockerell, Otto Magnus von Stackelberg, and Karl Haller von
Hallerstein had disinterred painted fragments of masonry daubed with
impermanent colours. This revelation was a direct contradiction of
Winckelmann's notion of the Greek temple as timeless, fixed, and pure in its
whiteness.
In 1823,
Samuel Angell discovered the coloured metopes of Temple C at Selinunte, Sicily
and published them in 1826. The French architect Jacques Ignace Hittorff
witnessed the exhibition of Angell's find and endeavoured to excavate Temple B
at Selinus. His imaginative reconstructions of this temple were exhibited in Rome
and Paris in 1824 and he went on to publish these as Architecture polychrome
chez les Grecs (1830) and later in Restitution du Temple d'Empedocle a Selinote
(1851). The controversy was to inspire von Klenze's "Aegina" room at
the Munich Glyptothek of 1830, the first of his many speculative
reconstructions of Greek colour.
Hittorff
lectured in Paris in 1829–1830 that Greek temples had originally been painted
ochre yellow, with the moulding and sculptural details in red, blue, green and
gold. While this may or may not have been the case with older wooden or plain
stone temples, it was definitely not the case with the more luxurious marble
temples, where colour was used sparingly to accentuate architectural
highlights.
Similarly,
Henri Labrouste proposed a reconstruction of the temples at Paestum to the
Académie des Beaux-Arts in 1829, decked out in startling colour, inverting the
accepted chronology of the three Doric temples, thereby implying that the
development of the Greek orders did not increase in formal complexity over
time, i.e., the evolution from Doric to Corinthian was not inexorable. Both
events were to cause a minor scandal. The emerging understanding that Greek art
was subject to changing forces of environment and culture was a direct assault
on the architectural rationalism of the day.
1 comment:
Interesting article (the video, while entertaining is not to academically correct, I'm afraid.)
I website that you might be interested in is: CLAXITY.COM
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