(Ackerman) The Villa As Paradigm
(Ackerman) The Villa As Paradigm
(Ackerman) The Villa As Paradigm
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10
1
Roman relief showing town
and suburban villa,
Avezzano, Italy
Introduction
11
12
2
Fresco of a pleasure villa
from Villa Barbaro, Masir,
Italy, by Paolo Veronese
3
"Badminton" by Antonio
Canaletto
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classical landscape
Seventeenth-century
that of Claude
particularly
painting,
Lorrain,rose to prominencein the following centuryand fostered the aesthetic of the
picturesqueand the informalEnglish garden;at the end of the centurythe first
Romanticvilla designers actuallytook the
imaginarybuildings of the Roman Campagnain Lorrainpaintings as architectural
models.The more modest ambitionsof the
mid-nineteenthcentury suburbanvilla are
reflectedin early Impressionistpaintings,
especiallythose of Monet.
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Monticello, Charlottesville,
Virginia, 1769, Thomas
Jefferson
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attachmentto the country life and architectural tastes of the British squire. The
absence of a comparablevilla development
in the northernAtlanticcolonies is initially
attributableto the differentsocial and political orientationof the colonists, the
majorityof whom, refugees from church
and class dominationat home, had not attained positions of privilege and statuson
which to reflect with nostalgia. They had,
furthermore,chosen an area more adapted
to family farming on small freeholdproperties, and they had establisheda society in
which there were no slaves, peasants, or
serfs to supporta gentlemanfarmeror to
maintaina pleasurevilla. The contrastbetween the northerncolonial farmerand the
southernplantationowner was even greater
than thatbetween Cato and Pliny the
Younger;Cato, a statesman,farmedfor
ideological and philosophicalreasons, while
his American counterparttilled the land to
survive, with a certainCatonian(and Protestant) pride in successful crops and in the
sweat they representedbut withoutthose
mythic trappingsthat find expressionin the
literature,art, and architecturalsymbolism
of a properideology. Eventuallythe polarity in both the Romanand the American
social and ethical attitudesbecame seeds of
civil war.
17
18
8
Villa Savoye, Poissy,
France, 1929-1930,
Le Corbusier
9
House II (Falk House),
Hardwick, Vermont, 1969,
Peter Eisenman
19
10
20
10
Villa dei Misteri, Pompeii,
Italy, first century B.c.
11
Villa Farnesina, Rome,
1509, sixteenth-century
view
12
Home Place Plantation,
Louisiana, 1801
13
Taliesin East, Spring
Green, Wisconsin, begun
1911, Frank Lloyd Wright
12
14
Villaof Lorenzo
de' Medici,Poggioa
Caiano,Italy,1489
15
VillaGodi,Lonedo,Italy,
1537-1542
The white-stuccoedpodium-villabecame a
major twentieth-centuryparadigm,notably
in the Villa Savoye at Poissy (fig. 8) and in
the TugendhatHouse in Bmo. Palladioalso
followed this traditionin the design of his
first villa, that of the Godi family in Lonedo
(fig. 15), which is also sharplygeometrical
in form, avoiding even window framesor
moldings; there is no podium, but the entrance stairwayleads to the upperfloor (later Palladianworks are more engaged with
nature-even the entirely cubic Villa Rotunda in Vicenza, which is designed to reflect the varied views and which seems to
crown the hill on which it is placed). The
effort to respond to natureby antithesisexplains the apparentparadoxof melding the
sharplygeometrical and classical Palladian
style in early eighteenth-centuryBritain (at
Lord Burlington'svilla at Chiswick, for example) with the inventionof the informal
English garden in reaction againstthe imposition of geometric orderon plant life.
21
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16
Imperial villa, Piazza
Armerina, Rome, third
century
17
Villa Lante, Ragnia,
Italy, 1568
18
Villa d'Este, Tivoli, Italy,
1565 (etching by Venturini)
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23
The View
24
The impact of the prospecton the conception of the villa was intensifiedin
eighteenth-centuryEnglandwhen the vogue
for the informal gardenwas extendedto
embrace the entire agriculturallandscape.
The effect was achievedby removingwalls,
hedges, and fences so that the lawn and
planted trees would merge imperceptibly
into pastureand bosc. The innovationwas
due not merely to a change of taste, as its
promotersmade it out to be, but also to a
radical change in agriculturaleconomy and
society resulting from the Acts of Enclosure, which wiped out the ancientcommon
pasturesand peasanttillage, as well as
many villages on the great estates, and
concentrateddevelopmentof the entire
landscape in the hands of the landowners.
Extended fields with cattle and haystacks
could now become embellishmentsof a
pastoralelegy.
19
View from Villa d'Este,
Tivoli, Italy, 1565
20
25
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22
Survival or Revival?
26
21
Gallo-Roman villa, Mayen,
Rhineland, first to fourth
centuries
22
Villa of Theodoric,
reconstruction, Galeata
near Ravenna, Italy, sixth
century
23
Gallo-Roman villa,
Montmaurin, France,
fourth century
24
27
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"Falling Water"
(Kaufmann house), Bear
Pennsylvania, 1936,
lFrank Lloyd Wright
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Rustic gate, 1584,
Serlio
27
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__ Gate Lodge, North
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~Easton,
Massachusetts,
1881, H H Richardson
28
Villa Medici, Cafaggiolo,
Italy, ca1450
27
28
28
29
Conclusion
30
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Villa Emo, Fanzolo, Italy,
1564, Andrea Palladio
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31