| 
      Stephen R. Wassell
        | Art and Mathematics before the Quattrocento: A Context for Understanding Renaissance Architecture
 |  Department of Mathematical Sciences
 Sweet Briar College
 Sweet Briar, Virginia 24595 USA
 
 In his classic Architectural
    Principles in the Age of Humanism, Rudolf Wittkower convincingly
    argues that an understanding of the roots of Renaissance architecture
    designed by masters such as Alberti and Palladio can be developed
    only by appreciating the relationships between architecture,
    music and mathematics as seen through the eyes of Renaissance
    architects and theorists. Crucial to developing this appreciation
    is the ability approach the world of knowledge as Renaissance
    scholars would have, without inherently accepting the artificial
    division of this world into arts and sciences-and the compartmentalized
    disciplines within each. Lionel March suggests "
the Renaissance might be
    called the era of conspicuous erudition in which patrons, scholars,
    and artists displayed their breadth of classical learning in
    various works and commissions." The foundation of learning
    upon which artists of the Renaissance built was constructed through
    a determined search for reason in aesthetics, logic in beauty
    and rational explanations to intangible phenomena, a search involving
    at least implicit use of mathematics.  This present paper
    briefly discusses Neolithic speculative geometry; the beginnings
    of history in the Middle East; the Greeks, first true mathematicians;
    the Romans, masters of engineering; and the Middle Ages. In the
    years immediately preceding the Renaissance, the qualitative
    view of neo-Platonic metaphysics slowly gave way to a more quantitative
    view of reality that would eventually allow science to progress
    at a steady pace. This transition was slow, and Renaissance scholars
    were still heavily influenced by long-held ideas on number symbolism
    and sacred geometry.
 As did their predecessors, Renaissance artists sought to incorporate
    meaning into their design by using a rational approach towards
    aesthetics. Some of the most prominent theorists -- Barbaro,
    Pacioli, and Dürer -- focused their efforts largely on concerns
    of geometry and proportion, often doing so within the context
    of the ideas described in this paper. Indeed, this was completely
    natural before the divorce of arts and sciences in the Age of
    Reason! It is crucial, therefore, to be able to put oneself in
    this same context if one is truly to understand Renaissance architecture. ILLUSTRATION:
    Stonemason's mark from the Cathedral of Strasburg. ABOUT
    THE AUTHORStephen
    R. Wassell is
    an Associate Professor of Mathematical Sciences at Sweet Briar
    College in Virginia (USA). He has received a Bachelor of Science
    degree in Architecture, a Ph.D. in Mathematics, and a Master's
    degree in Computer Science from the University of Virginia. After
    publishing several articles in his doctoral research area, mathematical
    physics, he is now studying the relationships between architecture
    and mathematics. At present, Steve's primary focus is on Palladian
    architecture, since its roots--Palladio's own architecture, his
    Quattro Libri, and the scholarly interests of his intellectual
    circle--exhibit on an obvious appreciation of the mathematical
    underpinnings of aesthetics. (This work has been partially supported
    by a grant from the Graham
    Foundation for Advanced Studies in the Fine Arts as well
    as numerous grants from Sweet Briar College.) Steve's overall
    mission is to explore and extol the mathematics of beauty and
    the beauty of mathematics. He is the author of "The Mathematics
    of Palladio's Villas Workshop '98", now available in the
    NNJ volume 1 in print, and the review of Branko
    Mitrovic's translation of Giacomo Barozzi
    Da Vignola, Canon of the Five Orders of Architecture. He presented "The
    Mathematics of Palladio's Villas" at Nexus 98, published
    in Nexus
    II: Architecture and Mathematics.
 
 
 
      
        | The correct citation for
        this article is: Stephen
        R. Wassell, "Art and Mathematics Before the Quattrocento:
        A Context for Understanding Renaissance Architecture", pp.
        157-168 in Nexus III: Architecture and Mathematics, ed.
        Kim Williams, Pisa: Pacini Editore, 2000. http://www.nexusjournal.com/conferences/N2000-Wassell.html
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