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Pazzi Chapel

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Pazzi Chapel
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{{Short description|Chapel at Santa Croce, Florence}}{{Coord|43|46|4.82|N|11|15|46.76|E|type:landmark|display=title}}
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- Florence, Santa Croce, Cappella dei Pazzi, 1440s-70s.jpg -
Pazzi Chapel and the cloister
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- Pazzi Chapel Florence Apr 2008.jpg -
Interior of the Pazzi Chapel
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- Cappellapazzi-portico.jpg -
thumbnail|Dome in the porch
The Pazzi Chapel () is a chapel located in the "first cloister" on the southern flank of the Basilica di Santa Croce in Florence, Italy. Commonly credited to Filippo Brunelleschi, it is considered to be one of the masterpieces of Renaissance architecture.

History

Though funds for the chapel were assembled in 1429 by Andrea Pazzi, head of the Pazzi family, whose wealth was second only to the Medici, construction did not begin until about 1442. The chapel was completed in 1443. The building is considered to be an Early Renaissance masterpiece.BOOK, Weigert, Hans, Buildings of Europe: Renaissance Europe, The Macmillan Company, 1961, Busch, Harald, New York, viii, 9, Lohse, Bernd, WEB, Pazzi Chapel - Florence,weblink 2020-08-20, The Museums of Florence, Formerly considered a work of Filippo Brunelleschi (d. 1446), it is now thought that he was responsible for the plan, which is based on simple geometrical forms,BOOK, Brunelleschi, Filippo: Architectural career, Encyclopædia Britannica, 2007, the square and the circle, but not for the building's execution and detailing. The most common argument for crediting Brunelleschi is the chapel's clear similarity to the Old Sacristy; others argue that his style had developed in the twenty-year interim and that the Pazzi Chapel would represent a retrograde step.Trachtenberg, p. 62 The first written mention of Brunelleschi as the architect was written by an anonymous author in the 1490s.MAGAZINE, Trachtenberg, Marvin, June 1996, Why the Pazzi Chapel is not by Brunelleschi, Casabella, 60, 60, cb635, 635, Scholars now consider the chapel as possibly the work of Giuliano da Maiano or Michelozzo.Eugenio Battisti. Filippo Brunelleschi: The Complete Work. (New York: Rizzoli, 1981) *See also: Howard Saalman. Filippo Brunelleschi: The Buildings. (London: Zwemmer, 1993).NEWS, Goldberger, Paul, January 1, 1997, Challenge to the Origin of a Florentine Chapel, 1.30, New York Times,weblink 2007-02-16, A façade thought to have been begun by Brunelleschi, of which only the lower register can be seen, was partially obscured by the addition of a porch. The main inspiration for this piece was the Dominican monastery of Santa Maria Novella, also located in Florence.The main purpose of the building was the cathedral chapter house (meeting room for the governing chapter) and use as a classroom for the teaching of monks and other religious purposes. There was also a chapel behind the altar where the commissioning family had the right to bury its dead. The Pazzi's ulterior motive in building the chapel was probably to make their mark on the city of Florence and to emphasize their wealth and power. The fact that the city was at war with a neighboring city at the time and still acquired the funds to build this chapel showed the importance it had to the Pazzi family and the people of Florence.The size of the chapel was predetermined by existing walls, creating an unusual situation, however, where the space was not square as in the Old Sacristy, which was the model for this building, but rectangular and transept-likeBOOK, 2007, architecture, Western: Early Renaissance in Italy (1401–95), Encyclopædia Britannica, and thus in contradistinction to the square, axially placed altar. Despite this, and its complex history, the building gives us insight into the ambitions of Renaissance architects in their struggle to bring coherence to the architectural language of columns, pilasters, arches and vaults. Between the pilasters in the transept there are tall, blank, round headed panels and, above them, roundels, common Renaissance decorative motifs. The architecture of the interior is articulated by the use of pietra serena, a dark, high quality, fine grained sandstone, though in fact the load-bearing structure of the building is its masonry, i.e. it is the walls that support the arches and domes, not the pilasters which are decorative rather than structural. (File:Pazzi chapel ceiling.jpg|thumbnail|Pazzi Chapel ceiling)The tondi of the seated Apostles are by Luca della Robbia, who also did the terracotta decorations in the cupola of the porch.BOOK, 2007, Della Robbia, Luca, Encyclopædia Britannica, The glazed terracotta roundels of the Four Evangelists inside the chapel derive from similar tondos by Donatello in the Old Sacristy of San Lorenzo, Florence, with the attribute of each Evangelist holding open a book that the saint appears to be copying, an unusual iconography.

See also

References

{{reflist}}

External links

{{commons category}} {{Florence landmarks}}{{Filippo Brunelleschi}}

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