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Villa and Palace in the Venetian Renaissance

Villa and Palace in the Venetian Renaissance

Villa and Palace in the Venetian Renaissance

The Palladian House Between Country and City
Johanna D. Heinrichs, University of Kentucky
December 2024
This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.
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9781009492249
$130.00
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Hardback

    Designed by Andrea Palladio, the Villa Pisani at Montagnana was the country residence of a Venetian nobleman, Francesco Pisani. Unusually, its design combines features of both villa and palace architecture, and it challenges the conventional view of a villa as subsidiary to the urban palace, the true seat of an elite family. In this book, Johanna D. Heinrichs offers the first comprehensive study of the Villa Pisani, providing a critical analysis of Palladio's hybrid design, the villa's original setting and uses, and the preoccupations of its patron. Heinrichs argues that the Villa Pisani served as the owner's principal residence. She also shows how a microhistorical approach can provide new insights about a familiar Renaissance building type and about the theory and practice of a canonical architect. Based on scrutiny of original documents and visual sources, Heinrichs's study is supported by a rich illustration program composed of photographs, plans, maps, and digital reconstructions.

    • Takes an in-depth, microhistorical (case study) approach to address larger questions about architectural typology, Palladio's theory and practice, and the history of the Republic of Venice
    • Synthesizes and interprets a large body of textual and visual material from public and private archives in Italy
    • Is richly illustrated with photographs as well as new maps, building plans, and digital reconstructions

    Reviews & endorsements

    ‘Venetian patrician Francesco Pisani’s villa-palace in Montagnana designed by Andrea Palladio was a hybrid expression of both urban and rural purposes and was the centerpiece of Pisani’s territorial and residential itinerary. The reader follows Johanna Heinrichs’s engaging account of this peripatetic patron from his rented accommodations in Venice to his Monselice ‘stop-over villa’ to the rich life of the agricultural seasons and cultural activities entertained at home in Montagnana - ‘a home and business, a place of leisure and hospitality.’ She also connects architectural features and functions to its US heritage in colonial and modern buildings, making this volume of interest to an audience for both Renaissance and Palladian studies and the classical tradition in architecture.’ Tracy E. Cooper, Professor of Art History, Tyler School of Art and Architecture, Temple University

    ‘Was Palladio’s Villa Pisani at Montagnana conceived as a villa or a palace? Was it a working farm or a rural retreat? Johanna Heinrichs looks at the villa through a series of different lenses to address these puzzling questions. Based on pioneering research, her fluently written book paints a vivid picture of the life and concerns of the patron, and it hardly comes as a surprise that Palladio was present at Francesco Pisani’s deathbed.’ Deborah Howard, Professor Emerita, University of Cambridge

    See more reviews

    Product details

    December 2024
    Adobe eBook Reader
    9781009492249
    0 pages
    This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.

    Table of Contents

    • Acknowledgments
    • Abbreviations
    • Introduction
    • Part I. Villa and Palace:
    • 1. Urban dignity & villa delights
    • 2. The patron
    • 3. Four seasons
    • Part II. Territory and Town:
    • 4. Estate building
    • 5. Montagnana and its Venetian Borgo
    • 6. Mobility and the stop-over villa
    • Part III. The Villa in Time:
    • 7. Between real and ideal
    • 8. Liminal architecture
    • 9. The villa as patrimony
    • Epilogue
    • Appendices
    • Manuscript and archival sources
    • Bibliography
    • Index.
      Author
    • Johanna D. Heinrichs , University of Kentucky

      Johanna D. Heinrichs is Assistant Professor in the School of Architecture at the University of Kentucky College of Design. Her research has been funded by the Gladys Krieble Delmas Foundation and the Italian Art Society.