Palladian style English architectural stvle, from c.1715, in imitation of the style of Andrea Palladio; a reaction against the Baroque in favour of the Classical; also called Neo-Palladian. Pantheon ...
palladian Related to the buildings of the sixteenth-century Italian architect Andrea Palladio, or to the eighteenth-century English revival of his style. parapet A portion of wall that projects above a roof.
Palladian An architectural style developed in 16th-century Venetia by Palladio.
Palladian - In the classical architectural style of Renaissance architect Andrea Palladio (Andrea di Pietro della Gondola) (Italian, 1508-1580).
In reaction to the Palladian formality of Jones Inigo (1573-1652) and the Baroque classicism of Sir Christopher Wren (1632-1723), whose St Paul's Cathedral in London was completed in 1711, ...
In 1905-1914 Russian architecture passed through a brief but influential period of neoclassical revival; the trend began with recreation of Empire style of alexandrine period and quickly expanded into a variety of neo-Renaissance, palladian and ...
There is an anti-Rococo strain that can be detected in some European architecture of the earlier 18th century, most vividly represented in the Palladian architecture of Georgian Britain and Ireland, ...
By illustrating domestic architecture with his own buildings, Palladio ensured the wide diffusion of his models, which resulted in the 18th century Palladian movements in England, Ireland and America.
Gli ordini nell'architettura classica (Orders in the Classical Architecture) is an Italian language site, which has a drawing by Andrea Palladio (Andrea di Pietro della Gondola) (Italian, 1508-1580) of a Corinthian capital. See Palladian. ...
The architecture of the arena lighted by the shadows of the sun at five o'clock in the afternoon, the hour of the bullfight, is a mixture of classical Spanish arenas with Palladian structures seen in Italy and the porticoes in the old, ...
See also: Roman, Classic, Sculpture, Painting, Renaissance
 
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