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Character of Renaissance Architecture

Chapter 2: PREFACE
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About This Book

The author analyzes the principles and practices that shaped Renaissance architecture, emphasizing its departure from medieval building methods and its complex relationship with classical models. He evaluates structural achievements such as the great dome and assesses constructional ingenuity alongside aesthetic shortcomings in order usage and ornament. Church design, civic and domestic architecture receive detailed study through measured examples and technical diagrams, while the role of painting and decorative taste in shaping architectural form is considered. The text combines critical history, constructive analysis, and illustrated comparisons to clarify the character and limitations of Renaissance building.

PREFACE

In the following attempt to set forth the true character of the architecture of the Renaissance I have endeavoured to reduce mere descriptions of buildings to a minimum, and to give graphic illustrations enough to make the discussions clear. The illustrations in the text are mainly from my own drawings, for the most part from photographs: but in a few cases I have reproduced woodcuts from the works of old writers, indicating, in each case, the source from which the cut is derived. The photogravure plates are from photographs by Alinari, Moscioni, Naya, Wilson, and Valentine. The right to reproduce and publish them has been obtained by purchase.

With the best intentions and the greatest care, it is almost inevitable that a writer on such a subject should make some mistakes, and I cannot affirm that no inexact statements will be found in these pages, but I believe that no fundamental errors occur.

I am again indebted to my almost life-long friend, Professor Charles Eliot Norton, for valuable criticism, and painstaking revision; but Professor Norton is not responsible for anything that I have said. I am indebted, also, to my publishers for their courteous compliance with my wishes as to the style and manufacture of the book, and to Mrs. Grace Walden for the care and thoroughness with which she has prepared the index.

Cambridge, Mass.,

October, 1905.