The Full Wiki



More info on Francesco di Giorgio

Francesco di Giorgio: Wikis

  
  

Note: Many of our articles have direct quotes from sources you can cite, within the Wikipedia article! This article doesn't yet, but we're working on it! See more info or our list of citable articles.

Encyclopedia

Updated live from Wikipedia, last check: June 01, 2012 01:31 UTC (53 seconds ago)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Extract from a notebook of Francesco Giorgio Martini - 1470
Chess game (detail)
La Rocca de San Leo

Francesco di Giorgio Martini (baptised 23 September 1439 – 1502) was an Italian painter of the Sienese School, a sculptor, an architect and theorist, and a military engineer who built almost seventy fortifications for the Duke of Urbino.

Born in Siena, he apprenticed as a painter with Vecchietta. In panels painted for cassoni he departed from the traditional representations of joyful wedding processions in frieze-like formulas to express visions of ideal, symmetrical, vast and all but empty urban spaces rendered in perspective. Francesco di Giorgio is also known for architectural designs and sculptural work for Federico III da Montefeltro, Duke of Urbino, for whom he built star-shaped fortifications.

He composed an architectural treatise Trattato di architettura, ingegneria e arte militare that he worked on for decades and finished sometime after 1482; it circulated in manuscript.[1] Its projects were well in advance of completed projects at the time. The third book is preoccupied with the "ideal" city, constrained within star-shaped polygonal geometries reminiscent of the star fort, whose wedge-shaped bastions are said[2] to have been his innovation.

Francesco di Giorgio finished his career as architect in charge of the works at the Duomo di Siena, where his bronze angels are on the high altar.

Further reading

  • Bertrand Gille, 1978. Les Ingénieurs de la Renaissance, Thèse Histoire, Paris, 1960. Seuil, in series Points Sciences) ISBN 2-02-004913-9

External links

Notes

  1. ^ Center for Palladian Studies in America, Inc., Palladio's Literary Predecessors The treatise was not printed until 1841, in Turin.
  2. ^ Siegfried Giedion, Space, Time and Architecture, 4th ed. 1962:43, fig. 6.







Got something to say? Make a comment.
Your name
Your email address
Message
Please enter the solution to case below
5-2=