Architecture and Geometry in the Age of the Baroque | 
enlarge | Author: George L. Hersey Publisher: University Of Chicago Press Category: Book
List Price: $32.50 Buy New: $22.20 You Save: $10.30 (32%)
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Rating: 1 reviews Sales Rank: 575766
Media: Paperback Pages: 284 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.5 Dimensions (in): 9.2 x 6.9 x 0.7
ISBN: 0226327841 Dewey Decimal Number: 724.16 EAN: 9780226327846
Publication Date: December 1, 2002 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Absolutely Brand NEW, just received directly from publisher. Professional packaging using sturdy boxes. Fast shipping. (CH36S45M47K23N31R21D21T5ZZD18T6F6G5E22B9L21;sh,sh-;SU1108T22F22PHB22;L1108H1)
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Product Description
The age of the Baroque—a time when great strides were made in science and mathematics—witnessed the construction of some of the world's most magnificent buildings. What did the work of great architects such as Bernini, Blondel, Guarini, and Wren have to do with Descartes, Galileo, Kepler, Desargues, and Newton? Here, George Hersey explores the ways in which Baroque architecture, with its dramatic shapes and playful experimentation with classical forms, reflects the scientific thinking of the time. He introduces us to a concept of geometry that encompassed much more than the science we know today, one that included geometrics (number and shape games), as well as the art of geomancy, or magic and prophecy using shapes and numbers.
Hersey first concentrates on specific problems in geometry and architectural design. He then explores the affinities between musical chords and several types of architectural form. He turns to advances in optics, such as artificial lenses and magic lanterns, to show how architects incorporated light, a heavenly emanation, into their impressive domes. With ample illustrations and lucid, witty language, Hersey shows how abstract ideas were transformed into visual, tactile form—the epicycles of the cosmos, the sexual mystique surrounding the cube, and the imperfections of heavenly bodies. Some two centuries later, he finds that the geometric principles of the Baroque resonate, often unexpectedly, in the work of architects such as Frank Lloyd Wright and Le Corbusier. A discussion of these surprising links to the past rounds out this brilliant reexamination of some of the long-forgotten beliefs and practices that helped produce some of Europe's greatest masterpieces.
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| Customer Reviews:
Thought provoking January 28, 2008 Name Here (Ostrander, MN) Let me say first off that George Hersey is obviously an expert in his field and writes very well. The problem for me is that he is comfortable enough with his subject that his observations run to the "poetic". While this is a good thing for readers equally knowledgeable in the disciplines that he traverses while writing this book it was not good for me. To aid anyone interested in this book let me say I am a male in my 60's with an MFA in the fine arts. Although I read prodigiously I am virtually untrained in music theory, and I left off my math studies after advance algebra. So, although I continue to work at expanding my education in these two subjects, and am retaining Hersey's book with the hopes of returning to it periodically as I come up to the line on these studies, it is beyond me right now...at least for it to be appreciated at the deserved depth. I believe that anyone with some experience with the history of architecture, projective geometry, and music theory will find this book a treasure trove of aesthetic enjoyment and information. Such a person will also have fun contemplating some of the new and original interpretations that Hersey injects into the material.
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