The Albano and Vignola Mutulary Doric Orders

February 23rd, 2012

Classical Comments:  The Albano and Vignola Mutulary Doric Orders

by Calder Loth
Senior Architectural Historian for the Virginia Department of Historic Resources and a member of the Institute of Classical Architecture & Art’s Advisory Council.

Source:  ICAA – The Classicist Blog  – http://blog.classicist.org/

 

One of the tasks (and pastimes) of an architectural historian is determining the genealogy of the many architectural details we see around us. This activity is especially important for the understanding and appreciation of classical architecture. Most of the classical forms and details we encounter can be traced to specific ancient sources but they are often subject to adjustments. To illustrate,  I am showing how two highly popular versions of the Doric order have been interpreted, if not personalized, by various architects to form individualized adaptations, either published or constructed.

 

We will look first at the order defined as the Doric of the Temple at Albano, an order originally recorded by the amateur French classicist Roland Fréart de Chambray (1606-1676) and published in his 1650 Parallèle de l’Architecture Antique avec la Modern. (Fig. 1)[i] Fréart stated, “This incomparable Dorique Master-piece was discovered at Albano, joyning to the Church of St. Mary, amongst divers other old fragments of Architecture very curious.”[ii] As depicted by Fréart, the Albano order is an enriched example of the Roman Doric, a contrast to the more restrained Doric of the Theater of Marcellus, also shown by Fréart, and which served as the basis for many of the Renaissance standardized versions. The defining features of the Albano Doric are the large mutule blocks in the cornice soffit. Each mutule is filled with thirty-six guttae. Other distinguishing features are the cavetto or coved crown molding (instead of the usual cyma recta), the richly decorated paterae in the metopes, and the egg-and-dart carving of the echinus.

 

Figure 1. The Doric of the Temple at Albano from Freart (page 21, John Evelyn 1664 edition)

 

As with several surviving ancient examples of Roman Doric, the Albano Doric column, like the Greek Doric, has no base. Fréart held a strong opinion on this point and cited Vitruvius as his authority for the appropriateness of the baseless Doric. Fréart wrote: “In the same place he [Vitruvius] compares our Dorique to a robust strong Man, such as an Hercules might be, whom we never represent but on his bare feet: so as from hence we may reasonably judge, that to the Dorique Order also Bases are no wayes proper.”[iii]A century earlier, Giacomo Vignola, in his famous treatise Canon of the Five Orders of Architecture (first published in 1562), illustrated two specific versions of the Doric order. Of the first, which uses a dentil course, Vignola stated that he based it on the Doric of the Theater of Marcellus. His second example is very similar to the Albano Doric in that it also has large mutule blocks with thirty-six guttae. (Fig. 2) As for its antique source, Vignola tells us only that was taken from different fragments of Roman ruins, and that “I have put these elements together and found them successful in practice.”[iv] We may speculate that the fragments Vignola referenced were the same elements at Albano that Fréart later studied, but they also could have been fragments found in Rome.[v] Nevertheless, because Vignola’s Canon became a primary authority on the orders for the next four centuries, versions of his “mutulary” Doric are seen on Innumerable classical buildings around the world. Indeed, Vignola’s Doric became a standard version of the order from the Renaissance well into the 20th century.

 

 

Figure 2. Plate 14, Giacomo Vignola, Canon of the Five Orders of Architecture.

 

A subtle but telling difference between Vignola’s Doric and Fréart’s Albano Doric is Vignola’s encasing of the guttae with a band around the mutules; i.e. the guttae profiles are not exposed on the edges of the mutules. (see Fig. 2)  Moreover, though he does not show it on his plate of the mutulary Doric, Vignola’s Doric, both mutulary and denticulated, is always executed with a base consisting of a single torus on a plinth. In addition, Vignola’s crown molding is a cyma recta as opposed to Fréart’s cavetto. Finally, Vignola’s column shaft is fluted where the Albano shaft is not. We might note that there is no hard and fast rule on the fluting of Roman columns.  Normally, if a Roman column was a monolith of granite or fine marble, it was not fluted. Fluting was used to deemphasize the joints when a column shaft was made up of series of drums.

 

18th-century British architects showed a partiality for the mutulary Doric. Various architects illustrated their own versions in their treatises. Among the first was James Gibbs, who presented the mutulary Doric in his highly influential Rules for Drawing the Several Parts of Architecture of 1732.[vi] (Figs. 3 & 4) Gibbs’s Doric follows Vignola’s very closely except that Gibbs inserts a panel in the center of his mutule, thus eliminating eight central guttae. For whatever reason, Gibbs determined that “A double square of two must be left plain in the middle”[vii] Gibbs also recommended the use of an Attic base (two toruses) for his column base.  Gibbs’s Rules was a popular reference work for 18th-century American architects and builders. A handsome colonial-period adaptation of Gibbs’s Doric is found on the porch added in 1768 to the ca. 1760 Mount Clare in Baltimore. (Fig. 5)

 

 

Figure 3 (left), Plate VIII (detail), James Gibbs, Rules for Drawing the Several Parts of Architecture. Figure 4 (right), Plate VIII (soffit detail) James Gibbs, Rules for Drawing the Several Parts of Architecture.

 

Figure 5. Mount Clare, Baltimore, Maryland (Loth)

 

Thomas Jefferson owned both Fréart’s and Gibbs’s treatises (as well as Vignola’s). Despite his partiality to Palladio, Jefferson relied on Gibbs for many of his details. So although he declared that he employed Fréart’s Doric of Albano for Pavilion IV at the University of Virginia, close examination reveals that its order is nearer to Gibbs’s Doric, incorporating Gibbs’s “double square” in the mutules, and a cyma recta crown molding instead of a cavetto. (Fig.6) Jefferson also followed Gibbs by adding an Attic base to Pavilion IV’s columns.  He appears to have relied again on Gibbs’s Doric in the parlor entablature of Pavilion II (Fig. 7), and in his tea-room at Monticello. We can only speculate that Jefferson found Gibbs’s instructions for executing the order easier to follow than Fréart’s.

 

Figure 6. Pavilion IV, University of Virginia, Charlottesville (Loth)

 

Figure 7. Parlor entablature, Pavilion II, University of Virginia (James Zehmer).

 

One of the most beautiful depictions of the mutulary Doric appears in Abraham Swan’s folio pattern book, The British Architect of 1745. (Fig. 8) Although Swan does not credit him, his plate closely adheres to Vignola’s version of the order. Swan stated in his introduction, “Palladio, Scamozzi, and Vignola, are certainly the best and most celebrated Authors who have wrote on Architecture”[viii] Sir William Chambers, another British architect of the period, presented his own version of Vignola’s mutulary Doric in his Treatise on the Decorative Part of Civil Architecture, first published in 1759. (Fig. 9) Interestingly, Chambers drew from Fréart in his use of a cavetto for his crown molding, but his mutules have the double square following the precedent of Gibbs, and the guttae are encased like Vignola’s.  As with Gibbs, both Swan and Chambers gave their Doric column an Attic base.  Apparently, it was difficult for 18th-century architects to accept a column without a base. Nevertheless, Chambers credits Vignola as his source of inspiration for his depiction of the Doric. He wrote, “This profile of Vignola’s, being composed in a greater stile, and in a manner more characteristic of the order than any other, I have chosen for my model.”[ix] Britain abounds with handsome examples of the mutulary Doric, using either Gibbs, Swan or Chambers  as  a source.  A bold and conspicuous representative of the mutulary  Doric is seen on John Nash’s portico on the 1822 Hanover Terrace in London’s Regent’s Park, a product of Nash’s reliance on Chambers. (Fig. 10)

 

Figure 8. Plate IV, Abraham Swan, The British Architect.

 

Figure 9. “The Doric Order,” Sir William Chambers, A Treatise on the Decorative Parts of Civil Architecture.

 

Figure 10. Hanover Terrace, Regent’s Park, London (Loth)

 

While Gibbs’s Rules became the main text for the orders for British architects, Vignola’s treatise was the primary authority for most of the Continental architects, and was the basis for the orders as taught to students of the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris. Hence, the American architects who studied at the École learned Vignola’s orders, and it was Vignola’s orders that became the foundation of the classicism of the American Renaissance of the late 19th and 20th centuries. Thus, it is not surprising that on the works of the American architects who studied at the École we find a liberal use of Vignola’s mutulary Doric. Among the most talented of America’s Beaux-Arts-trained architects was Arthur Brown, Jr., whose central building of Washington’s Federal Triangle offers a monumental display of the order. (Fig. 11)  Brown, however, elected to avoid guttae in its mutules; possibly because the grandiose scale of the building would make mutules with guttae appear finicky. (Fig. 12) Brown also did not include the egg-and-dart carving in the echini of its capitals.

 

Figure 11. Mellon Auditorium, Federal Triangle, Washington, D.C. (Loth)

 

Figure 12. Mellon Auditorium entablature, Federal Triangle, Washinton, D.C. (Loth)

 

The French preference for Vignola’s versions of the orders over Palladio’s, or those of other Renaissance architects, or even the Anglo-Palladian architects, spilled over into American architecture schools. The principal agent for this was William R. Ware’s American Vignola, published in 1903, a work that became the textbook on classical architecture for nearly all American architectural students in the first half of the 20th century. In his preface, Ware stated, “Other systems have been presented by Alberti, Palladio, Scamozzi, Serlio, Sir William Chambers and others. But Vignola’s Orders have generally been accepted as the Standard.”[x] Thus, the two versions of the Doric presented by Ware follow Vignola’s, with the mutulary version being shown first and without the double square introduced by Gibbs. (Fig.13)

 

Figure 13. The Mutulary Doric, William R. Ware, The American Vignola, fifth edtion, p. 12.

The American Vignola made the mutulary Doric popular not only with architects but with building supply companies. Consequently, we have hundreds, if not thousands of examples of Vignola’s mutulary Doric spread across the country. Typical is the front porch of an early 20th-century faculty residence at Virginia’s Sweet Briar College (Fig.14 ). The front portico of an elementary school in the village of Waterford, Virginia, also dating from the early 20th century makes academic use of the order, a common phenomenon on public schools and institutional buildings throughout the U.S. (Fig. 15) Nevertheless, not all American architects were beholden to The American Vignola. In its design for the cornice of Manhattan’s Henry Hollins house, on Manhattan’s West 56th Street, the firm of McKim, Mead & White chose to duplicate the cornice of the Albano Doric from Fréart, complete with thirty-six fully exposed guttae and a cavetto crown molding. (Fig.16)[xi]

 

Figure 14. Faculty residence, Sweet Briar College, Amherst, Virginia (Loth)

 

Figure 15. Waterford Elementary School, Waterford, Virginia (Loth)

 

Figure 16. Cornice, 14 W. 56th Street, New York City (Loth)

 

[i] Albano is a town on Lake Albano, in the Alban hills about eighteen miles south of Rome.
[ii]
The quote is from John Evelyn’s 1654 English translation of Fréart’s work, titled A Parallel of the Antient Architecture with the Modern, p. 20.
[iii]
Ibid, page 12.
[iv]
Giacomo Barozzi da Vignola, Canon of the Five Orders of Architecture, (1999 English translation by Branko Mitrovic of the the 1572 edition) Acanthus Press, 1999, plate 14.
[v]
William R. Ware, in The American Vignola suggests that Vignola’s mutulary Doric order was derived from the Doric order of the Basilica Julia in the Roman Forum. American Vignola, fifth edition, 1904, p. 13.
[vi]
Gibbs’s Doric closely parallels that illustrated by Claude Perrault in his 1683 treatise on the orders.
[vii]
James Gibbs, Rules for Drawing the Several Parts of Architecture (1732), page 10.
[viii]
Abraham Swan, The British Architect (Dover Publications 2003 reprint of the 1793 [3rd edition], page III.
[ix]
Sir William Chambers, Treatise on the Decorative Parts of Civil Architecture, p.45.
[x]
William R. Ware, The American Vignola (Fifth edition, 1904) page iii
[xi]
I am grateful to Hugh Petter who engaged my interest in the Albano Doric more than a decade ago.

 

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Eisenhower Memorial on the Mall in Washington, D.C.

February 8th, 2012

Designing Eisenhower Memorial on the Mall in D.C.

Written by: Paul Gunther – President, The Institute of Classical Architecture

Source: The Huffington Post Online

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/paul-gunther/eisenhower-memorial-dc_b_1260717.html

 

Sadly, the pending scheme by Frank Gehry for the Dwight D. Eisenhower Memorial proposed on a colossal four-acre site in the District of Columbia’s civic epicenter is theme-park architecture. This term was coined by the late Times architecture critic Herbert Muschamp in describing work tied to jingo and nostalgia. The themes of “humble origins” and the interstate highway system as the determinate metaphors for a life’s journey, especially when the subject in question helped sustain liberty as much as anyone in recorded history, perfectly fits Muschamp’s bona fides for this critical category.

 

Now is the time to take stock accordingly as the National Capital Planning Commission sits down early next month to make its final decision. They do so in the context of passionate disagreement, along with the Eisenhower family itself as is now broadly known.

 

Gehry’s plan is more attuned to the World’s Fairs of the mid-20th century, such as Montreal’s Expo 67.  Philip Johnson’s 1964 New York State Pavilion in Flushing Meadows Corona Park, Queens, still standing despite a three score debate over its adaptive reuse, also comes to mind.  The proposed plan is a huge open-air pavilion, which despite its size, misleadingly and inexplicably edits an epic biography of preeminence in the ongoing American experiment that is second to none.  It falls short both symbolically and pedagogically.

 

Likewise it is a design conceived for a single once-in-a-lifetime encounter, one that ideally would be made from a fixed point of approach to make full narrative sense (i.e. “the line starts here”) and before the trees grow to obscure such a fixed and demanding scenario. Maybe that’s fine but where’s the door? It favors novelty as opposed to “of its time” design done well; design which outlasts its time, complying with the implicit aim of the original congressional mandate.

 

Paradoxically, despite its enormity (a scale transcending even that of the Amun-Re Precinct of Luxor’s Karnak Temple Complex), there is no way to incorporate this amorphous zone into the daily rhythms of shared urban existence. And, yet, it also does not limit it in any way as a destination terminus (e.g. the de facto cemetery and cenotaph of the new National September 11 Memorial). It is a place to pass through. A parallax ensues.

 

In contrast, John Lennon’s Strawberry Fields in Central Park shows how a well-designed memorial with its conceptual eye on daily benevolence can accomplish exactly that.  Worse still, this monumental scale turns its back on the contiguous Lyndon B. Johnson Department of Education Building and those women and men who work there, day in and day out, to fulfill their statutory duties.  Was not that hubristic urban planning mistake learned 50 years ago at New York’s Lincoln Center, where except for one library door, a rear facade of loading docks and high terrace walls served only to remind residents that their attendance was not expected?  It seems a regrettable reminder, too, of the benighted World Trade Center’s former plaza, where no one wanted to go unless they had to.

 

Furthermore, Gehry’s experimental, ephemeral materials and methodologies are unlikely to endure. Stone and cast metals have stood the test of time and are deployed for that reason; happily they can be endlessly revisited and reinvented to meet modern applications. The fact that contemporary classicism so uses them is just one exemplary result. In contrast, high-tech interpretive mediation available in the moment of its construction will fade in utility even if winter blasts and prolonged heat allow them to function past an initial phase of critical novelty. (Expo 67 had computers, though no one under the age of 45 would recognize them as such.)

 

Should maintenance and enduring access be factors for the architect? You bet. To assert otherwise is unforgivably shortsighted. No doubt Gehry believes honorably that he has considered them but his view flies in the face of the realities of maintenance during these protracted times of limited public resources and constantly advancing options for co-existing virtual interface. It seems unwise to delimit such inevitable progress in the dynamic realm of technological interpretation.

 

Perhaps most troubling is Mr. Gehry’s startling words when describing it as a “theater for the car.” After more than a century, he recalls Marinetti’s 1909 Futurist Manifesto and its fifth thesis: We want to sing the man at the wheel, the ideal axis of which crosses the earth, itself hurled along its orbit.  Using General Eisenhower to celebrate the wheeled motor vehicle?  If the goal is an ironic wink at his role in realizing finally an interstate highway system, perhaps the commission should transplant the entire concept to the closest I-95 off ramp? (Gehry made this goal clear when stating that partial inspiration for the monument were the support pylons underneath Eisenhower Highway System overpasses.)

 

Eisenhower with his wise post-war burst of enlightened public investment in infrastructure –required but not attainable by the private sector alone — completed it 20 years after its original Depression-era conception. That is why there are already tens of thousands of Eisenhower Interstate System signs along the shoulders of the entire roadway network — a tribute well-tended since the mandate to do so by President George H.W. Bush in 1990.

 

Instead, this particular memorial belongs where it is, and, regardless of any unfair slight to those who defined progress differently 60 years ago, we now know better than to defer to the car at the expense of the pedestrian. There is no turning back due for starters to the kind of traffic Marinetti apparently never anticipated. Alas, speed and theater are not among the D.C. driver’s daily experiences.  They belong to a century-old fantasy of Tomorrowland.

 

Nor is this plan suited to the long-term design and civic obligations of memorial design at its best. While Frank Gehry has been one of the foremost visionary designers on the globe, above all in the late-20th century, especially when inventing freestanding sculptural forms reliant on a pre-existing context for aggressive contrast or neutral yield, in this case he has fallen short of past rigor. This plan fails to fulfill the full spirit of the commissioning blueprint and the statue that spawned it in the first place.

 

Such shortcomings have nothing to do per se with style or preferred precise design vocabulary. Yet, indeed, the classical tradition at its best transcends time with the nearby Lincoln Memorials and the astonishing Washington Monument serving as ageless examples. Many feel the same about the abstract modern simplicity of Maya Lin’s renowned Vietnam Veterans Memorial, which succeeds at honoring the dead even for those without any living connection since its topographical sanctity spawns investigation and reflection.

 

Whether or not it is the case with Mr. Gehry, the men and women charting this vital memorial course need to go back to the drawing board aka AutoCAD and make sure the full potential at hand takes permanent hold in the hearts and imaginations of future visitors including those encountering this hallowed site without prior expectations, and, perhaps most challenging, those passing by every day.

 

 

Chadsworth – 2012 New Products & Online Features

January 24th, 2012

 

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Balusters & Balustrades: Familiar Elements of Classical Architecture

January 19th, 2012

 

Over the years, Chadsworth has been recognized as providing builders, architects, & homeowners with architecturally correct columns – hence the name, Chadsworth Columns.

 

Two decades and four years have witnessed many changes for Chadsworth, including the recent expansion of product lines.  Although the company name is in no hurry to adjust its name, Chadsworth is proud to offer Architectural Balusters & Balustrade Systems — for residential & commercial projects!  Standard balusters & Stair balusters.  PolyStone®, Classic Stone, and Polyurethane (no not Polyurestone . . ).

 

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