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Item Number: 142046
Title: Architecture as profession : The origins of architectural practice in the Low Countries in the fifteenth century
Author: Hurx, Merlijn
Price: Not Available
ISBN: 9782503568256
Description: Turnhout: Brepols, 2018. 28cm., pbk., 459pp. 16 color, 265 b&w illus.

Summary: Fifteenth-century Florence is generally considered the cradle of the modern architect. There, for the first time since Antiquity, the Vitruvian concept which distinguishes between builder and designer was recognised in architectural theory, causing a fundamental rupture in architectural practice. In this well-established narrative Northern Europe only followed a century later when, along with the diffusion of Italian treatises and the introduction of the all’antica style, a new type of architect began to replace traditional gothic masters. However, historiography has largely overlooked the important transformations in building organisation that laid the foundations for our modern architectural production, such as the advent of affluent contractors, public tenders, and specialised architectural designers, all of which happened in fifteenth-century Northern Europe. Drawing on a wealth of new source material from the Low Countries, this book offers a new approach to the transition from the Middle Ages to the Early Modern Period by providing an alternative interpretation to the predominantly Italo-centric perspective of the current literature, and its concomitant focus on style and on Vitruvian theory.

Contents: Introduction - Professionalisation in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries and the ideal of the architect - Economics and the position of the architect - Design and construction - Different sources, methods and approaches - Approach and structure of the book. Chapter 1. The liberty to design - Defining the architect - Designs for different media - Liberal arts and the guilds' monopoly - Patrons and guild authority - Constelyk gemaickt, artistic quality as a licence. Chapter 2. Urban building boom - Urbanisation in the Low Countries - City walls - City churches - Trade halls and town halls - Princely residences - Urban architectural rivalry. Chapter 3. The stone trade - The need for stone - Contracting building works - Benefits of the market - Expanding markets - Innovations in the production process - Managing the stone trade. Chapter 4. Quarrying at Brussels - Stones and quarries - Commercial importance and stone politics - Brussels entrepreneurs in stone: Godevaert de Bosschere and Lodewijk van Boghem. Chapter 5. Profession of the architect - Background and training - Changing conditions of employment - Evert Spoorwater and Rombout Keldermans - Undermasters and methods of communication - Engineer, manager, designer. Chapter 6. Communicating the design - The drawing as planning instrument - Innovations in architectural representation - The design in words. Chapter 7. Strategies for 'prefab' architecture - Plain architecture by prominent architects - Repeated designs. Appendices - 1. Money and measurements - 2. Projects by Evert Spoorwater, sources of table 5.1 - 3. Projects by Rombout Keldermans, sources of table 5.2. (Architectura Moderna, Architectural Exchanges in Europe, 16th-17th Centuries, 13)

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