Course detail
History of Architecture 3
FAST-BGA025Acad. year: 2022/2023
Survey of the history of the Modern Age ranging from the Italian Renaissance, its evolutionary stages and high representatives, over the transalpine Renaissance, the Renaissance in the Bohemian lands, the Italian Baroque, the French Baroque and the Classicism, the German and Austrian Baroque, the Baroque in Bohemia and Moravia to the greatest personalities working at that time in our territory. The development of the art of construction of the Modern Age in relation to the social and economic background and the stage of technological development.
Language of instruction
Number of ECTS credits
Mode of study
Guarantor
Department
Learning outcomes of the course unit
Prerequisites
Co-requisites
Planned learning activities and teaching methods
Assesment methods and criteria linked to learning outcomes
Course curriculum
2. Early Renaissance in Italy (Bruneleschi, Alberti, Sangallo sr., etc.).
3. High Renaissance in Italy (Bramante, Rafael, Sangallo jr., Peruzzi, etc.), the Late Renaissance, the Mannerism (Michelangelo, Vignola, Paladio, etc.).
4. Renaissance ouside Italy – France, Spain and Portugal, the Netherlands, Germany.
5. Renaissance in Bohemia and Moravia I.
6. Renaissance in Bohemia and Moravia II.
7. Baroque – cultural and social background, technology, space, set of architectonic elements, evolution.
8. Baroque in Italy I. (Maderna, Bernini).
9. Baroque in Italy II. (Borromini, Guarini).
10. Baroque of French classicism.
11. Baroque in Germany and Austria.
12. Baroque in Bohemia and Moravia.
13. The most outstanding representatives of the Bohemian Baroque (the Dientzenhofers, Kaňka, Santini, etc.).
Work placements
Aims
Specification of controlled education, way of implementation and compensation for absences
Recommended optional programme components
Prerequisites and corequisites
Basic literature
KOCH, Wilfried. Evropská architektura. Encyklopedie evropské architektury od antiky po současnost. 3. vyd. Praha: Euromedia Group – Knižní klub, 2012. 552 s. ISBN: 978-80-242-3657-5.
SYROVÝ, Bohuslav. Architektura – svědectví dob: přehled vývoje stavitelství a architektury. 3., dopl. vyd. Praha: Státní nakladatelství technické literatury, 1987.
Recommended reading
CASSON, Hugh. Dějiny architektury. Praha: Odeon, 1993. ISBN 80-207-0185-0.
KALNEIN, Wend von. Architecture in France in the Eighteenth Century (The Yale University Press Pelican History of Art). New Haven: Yale University Press, 1995. ISBN 978-0300060133.
KONEČNÝ, Michal (ed.). Na věčnou paměť, pro slávu a vážnost. Renesanční aristokratická sídla v Čechách a na Moravě ve správě Národního památkového ústavu. 1. vyd. Kroměříž: Národní památkový ústav, územní památková správa v Kroměříži, 2017. 668 s. ISBN: 978-80-906899-2-3.
MORRISON, Tessa. Unbuilt Utopian Cities 1460 to 1900. Reconstructing their Architecture and Political Philosophy. 1. vyd. London – New York: Routledge, 2016. 262 s. ISBN: 978-1472452658.
Classification of course in study plans
- Programme BPC-APS Bachelor's 2 year of study, summer semester, compulsory
Type of course unit
Lecture
Teacher / Lecturer
Syllabus
1. Renaissance – cultural and social background, technology, space, set of architectonic elements.
2. Early Renaissance in Italy (Bruneleschi, Alberti, Sangallo sr., etc.).
3. High Renaissance in Italy (Bramante, Rafael, Sangallo jr., Peruzzi, etc.), the Late Renaissance, the Mannerism (Michelangelo, Vignola, Paladio, etc.).
4. Renaissance ouside Italy – France, Spain and Portugal, the Netherlands, Germany.
5. Renaissance in Bohemia and Moravia I.
6. Renaissance in Bohemia and Moravia II.
7. Baroque – cultural and social background, technology, space, set of architectonic elements, evolution.
8. Baroque in Italy I. (Maderna, Bernini).
9. Baroque in Italy II. (Borromini, Guarini).
10. Baroque of French classicism.
11. Baroque in Germany and Austria.
12. Baroque in Bohemia and Moravia.
13. The most outstanding representatives of the Bohemian Baroque (the Dientzenhofers, Kaňka, Santini, etc.).