Jump to content

Petrine Baroque: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
rmv copyright violation
mNo edit summary
Line 10: Line 10:


==Further reading==
==Further reading==
* William Craft Brumfield. '''''A History of Russian Architecture''''' (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993) ISBN 978-0-521-40333-7 (Chapter Eight: "The Foundations of the Baroque in Saint Petersburg")
* William Craft Brumfield. ''A History of Russian Architecture'' (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993) ISBN 978-0-521-40333-7 (Chapter Eight: "The Foundations of the Baroque in Saint Petersburg")


==References==
==References==
<references/>
<references/>
{{arch-style-stub}}

{{Baroque architecture by country}}
{{Baroque architecture by country}}


Line 21: Line 21:
[[Category:Russian architecture by period]]
[[Category:Russian architecture by period]]
[[Category:Architectural styles]]
[[Category:Architectural styles]]

{{arch-style-stub}}

Revision as of 12:09, 4 April 2014

Kikin Hall (1714), an example of private residence dating from Peter I's reign.

Petrine[1] Baroque (Rus. Петровское барокко) is a name applied by art historians to a style of Baroque architecture and decoration favoured by Peter the Great and employed to design buildings in the newly founded Russian capital, Saint Petersburg, under this monarch and his immediate successors.

Unlike contemporaneous Naryshkin Baroque, favoured in Moscow, the Petrine Baroque represented a drastic rupture with Byzantine traditions that had dominated Russian architecture for almost a millennium. Its chief practitioners - Domenico Trezzini, Andreas Schlüter, and Mikhail Zemtsov - drew inspiration from a rather modest Dutch, Danish, and Swedish architecture of the time.

Extant examples of the style in St Petersburg are the Peter and Paul Cathedral (Trezzini), the Twelve Colleges (Trezzini), the Kunstkamera (Zemtsov), Kikin Hall (Schlüter) and Menshikov Palace (Giovanni Fontana)

The Petrine Baroque structures outside St Petersburg are scarce; they include the Menshikov Tower in Moscow and the Kadriorg Palace in Tallinn.

Further reading

  • William Craft Brumfield. A History of Russian Architecture (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993) ISBN 978-0-521-40333-7 (Chapter Eight: "The Foundations of the Baroque in Saint Petersburg")

References

  1. ^ from the name of Peter I of Russia