Renaissance art and architecture: French Architecture
French Architecture
In France in the 16th cent., Renaissance taste made one of its first tentative appearances in the Louis XII wing of the château of Blois. In the first period Gothic traditions persisted in plan, structure, and exterior masses, onto which fresh and graceful Renaissance details were grafted. The movement was sponsored by Francis I, a prolific builder. Handsome and livable châteaus replaced grim feudal castles. Fontainebleau, Chambord, and Azay-le-Rideau are famous examples.
The beginning (1546) of the construction of the Louvre by Pierre Lescot usually serves as the opening date of the classical period. Classical proportions and methods of composition were assimilated, and the use of the orders became general. Although Italian models were followed, a distinctively French brand of classicism took form. The leading architects were Lescot, Philibert Delorme, and the Androuet du Cerceau family. Jean Goujon and others contributed fine sculptural adornments.
Sections in this article:
- Introduction
- Renaissance Architecture Elsewhere in Europe
- French Architecture
- Italian Renaissance Architecture
- Architecture of the Renaissance
- Renaissance Art Elsewhere in Europe
- German Art
- The Flemish Renaissance
- The Italian Renaissance
- Bibliography
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