Leonbattista Alberti
c. 1452-1470
The front facadeAlberti designed a rational "skin" for this palace--a type of "screen" architecture in which the classical elements provide no support structure. All three stories are of equal height with flat pilasters supporting a classical entablature. Imitating in part the Colosseum, the capitals vary from Tuscan (bottom story), to Alberti's own invention (acanthus leaves with a center palmette), to Corinthian on the top story. | |
Alberti's invented capital (in Classical architecture the second story would have used the Ionic order) and the severe Tuscan order of the bottom story | |
The windows of the second story (left) and top story (right) |
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The massive Classical cornice and detail of the Corinthian capital of the top story |
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Click here to see an earlier Renaissance palace in Florence--the Palazzo Medici-Riccardi.
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