Saturday, 13 July 2013

Baroque (Part Nine).


Text and Illustrations from Wikipedia - the free encyclopaedia,
unless otherwise stated.


File:Church of St Francis de Sales (interior), 16 Krowoderska street, Krakow, Poland.jpg


English: Church of Saint Francis de Sales, Krakow, Poland.
Polski: Kościół św. Franciszka Salezego (wnętrze), ul. Krowoderska 16, Kraków.
Photo: 17 July 2008.
Source: Own work.
Author: Zygmunt Put Zetpe0202.
(Wikimedia Commons)


The magnates, throughout the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, competed with the kings. The monumental castle, Krzyżtopór, built in the style palazzo in fortezza between 1627 and 1644, had several courtyards surrounded by fortifications. Late Baroque fascination with the culture and art of the "central nation" is reflected in Queen Masysieńka's Chinese Palace in Zolochiv. 18th-Century magnate Palaces represent the characteristic type of Baroque suburban residence built entre cour et jardin (between the entrance court and the garden). Its architecture, a merger of European art with old Commonwealth building traditions, is visible in Wilanów Palace, Branicki Palace in Białystok and in Warsaw, Potocki Palace in Radzyń Podlaski, Raczyński Palace in Rogalin and Wiśniowiecki Palace in Vyshnivets. Architects such as Johann Christoph Glaubitz were instrumental in forming the so-called distinctive Vilnius Baroque style, which spread throughout the region.


File:Krakow church 20070804 0826.jpg


Polski: Kościół św. Floriana w Krakowie.
English: Saint Florian Church in Kraków, Poland.
Photo: 4 August 2007.
Source: Own work.
Author: Jakub Hałun.
(Wikimedia Commons)


By the end of the century, Polish Baroque influences crossed the Dnieper into the Cossack Hetmanate, where they gave birth to a particular style of Orthodox architecture, known as the Cossack Baroque. Such was its popular appeal, that every Medieval Church in Kiev and the Left-Bank Ukraine was redesigned according to the newest fashion.

A notable style of Baroque architecture emerged in the 18th-Century with the work of Johann Christoph Glaubitz, who was assigned to rebuild the Commonwealth capital city of Vilnius. The style was therefore named "Vilnian Baroque" and Old Vilnius was named the "City of Baroque". The most notable buildings by Glaubitz in Vilnius are the Church of Saint Catherine (1743), the Church of the Ascension (1750), the Church of Saint John, the Monastery Gate and the Towers of the Church of the Holy Trinity. The magnificent and dynamic Baroque facade of the formerly Gothic Church of Saint John (1749) is mentioned among his best works. Many Church interiors, including the one of the Great Synagogue of Vilna, were reconstructed by Glaubitz as well as the Town Hall in 1769.


File:St. Michael's Catheral view.JPG


English: View of the Saint Michael's Golden-Domed Cathedral in Kiev, Ukraine, 
from the Saint Sophia Bell-Tower.
Français: Vue de la Cathédrale Saint-Michel au Dôme d'Or de Kiev 
depuis le clocher de Sainte Sophie.
Photo: 2 July 2007.
Source: Own work.
(Wikimedia Commons)

The Saint Michael's Golden-Domed Monastery in Kyiv, Ukraine, although started in 1113, represents one of the most typical examples of Ukrainian Baroque architecture.


Notable buildings of Vilnian Baroque in other places are Saint Sophia Cathedral in Polotsk, Belarus (rebuilt in 1738-1765), the Carmelite Church in Hlybokaye, Belarus (1735) and the Church of Saint Peter and Saint Paul in Berezovichi, Belarus (built in 1776, the 1960s and 1970s), its replica was constructed in Białystok in the 1990s.

In Russia, Baroque architecture passed through three stages: The early Moscow Baroque, with elegant white decorations on red-brick walls of rather traditional Churches: the mature Petrine Baroque, mostly imported from the Low Countries: and the late Rastrelli-esque Baroque, which was, in the words of William Brumfield, "extravagant in design and execution, yet ordered by the rhythmic insistence of massed Columns and Baroque statuary."

The first Baroque Churches were built in the estates of the Naryshkin family of Moscow boyars. It was the family of Natalia Naryshkina, Peter the Great's mother. Most notable in this category of small suburban Churches were the Church of the Intercession, in Fili (1693 - 1696), the Holy Trinity Church, in Troitse-Lykovo (1690 - 1695), and the Church of the Saviour, in Ubory (1694–97). They were built in red brick with profuse detailed decoration in white stone. The belfry was not any more placed beside the Church, as was common in the 17th-Century, but on the facade itself, usually surmounting the octagonal central Church and producing daring vertical compositions.


File:Russie - Moscou - Novodevichy 4.jpg


Русский: Новодевичий монастырь в Москве.
Français: Couvent de Novodievitchi (à Moscou en Russie).
English: Novodevichy Convent, Moscow.
Deutsch: Nowodewitschi-Kloster in Moskau.
Photo: 17 May 2007.
Source: Own work.
Author: Anne-Laure PERETTI Lotusalp.
(Wikimedia Commons)


File:Church of the Protection of the Theotokos in Fili 05.jpg


The Church of the Intercession, at Fili, Russia.
Built in 1694.
Photo: 25 April 2010.
Author: Sergey Rodovnichenko from Moscow, Russia.
(Wikimedia Commons)

The Church of the Intercession at Fili (Russian: Це́рковь Покрова́ в Филя́х) is a Naryshkin Baroque Church commissioned by the boyar Lev Naryshkin in his suburban estate, Fili; the territory has belonged to the City of Moscow since 1935.


As the style gradually spread around Russia, many Monasteries were remodelled after the latest fashion. The most delightful of these were the Novodevichy Convent and the Donskoy Monastery in Moscow, as well as Krutitsy metochion and Solotcha Cloister near Riazan. Civic architecture also sought to conform to the Baroque aesthetics, e.g., the Sukharev Tower in Moscow, and there is also a Neo-Form of this style, like the Principal Medicine Store on Red Square. The most important architects associated with the Naryshkin Baroque were Yakov Bukhvostov and Peter Potapov.

Petrine Baroque is a name applied by art historians to a style of Baroque architecture and decoration favoured by Peter the Great and employed to design buildings in the newly-founded Russian capital, Saint Petersburg, under this monarch and his immediate successors. Unlike contemporaneous Naryshkin Baroque, favoured in Moscow, the Petrine Baroque represented a drastic rupture with Byzantine traditions that had dominated Russian architecture for almost a millennium. Its chief practitioners – Domenico Trezzini, Andreas Schlüter, and Mikhail Zemtsov – drew inspiration from a rather modest Dutch, Danish, and Swedish architecture of the time. Extant examples of the style in Saint Petersburg are the Peter and Paul Cathedral, the Twelve Colleges, the Kunstkamera, Kikin Hall and Menshikov Palace.The Petrine Baroque structures outside Saint Petersburg are scarce; they include the Menshikov Tower in Moscow and the Kadriorg Palace in Tallinn.


File:St-Anne church Krakow 003.JPG


Interior of the Church of Saint Anne in Krakow, Poland.
Photo: 2009.
Source: Own work.
Author: Gryffindor.
(Wikimedia Commons)


File:Klosterkirche-Raitenhaslach-Blick-Altar.jpg


English: The Monastery Church at Raitenhaslach, Bavaria, Germany.
Deutsch: Klosterkirche Raitenhaslach, Blick in Richtung Altar.
Photo: 30 July 2010.
Source: Own work.
Author: Misburg3014.
(Wikimedia Commons)


PART TEN FOLLOWS.


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