Inigo Jones and the Classical Tradition
Inigo Jones worked as hard on the creation of his architectural persona as he did on the design of the buildings for the early Stuart court. Through his study of continental architectural and art theory, humanist education, and courtly behavior, Jones redefined the intellectual status of architecture in England and forged a new role for the architect in public life. Since his death, he has been variously described as the first educated architect, the first classicist, the first Renaissance architect in Britain, and the savior of British building from the long winter of the Elizabethan style. This reputation has overlooked the many ways that Jones drew on English customs in order to shape classical architecture for a domestic audience. This 2006 book explores the creation of Jones as professional architect and the development of classical architecture in England through a study of his reading, writing, and architectural practice.
- Places Jones in context of English Renaissance culture, including issues of book culture, reading communities, nationality, changing ideas of masculinity, and antiquarianism
- Based on extensive research on the library and annotations by Jones
- Intriguing interpretation of architectural classicism in England and northern Europe
Reviews & endorsements
'The strength of the book under review lies in the link established between the events of Jone's life and interpretations widely adopted by critics of literature and historians, such that Jones emerges as a man of his time, as today's scholarly community productively construes it. Anderson demonstrates that the architect treasured, read, and otherwise used books in ways similar to those more learned or of a higher social class than he: we thus newly appreciate why they esteemed him." - John E. Moore, Smith College
Product details
November 2010Paperback
9780521181310
294 pages
254 × 178 × 16 mm
0.51kg
Available
Table of Contents
- 1. Introduction: books and buildings
- 2. The famous Mr. Jones
- 3. Building a library
- 4. Conversations with the dead
- 5. The hand of Inigo Jones
- 6. A more masculine order
- 7. Practices
- 8. Conclusion: inventing the past for the present.