Baroque extravaganzas: rock tombs, fountains, and sanctuaries in Jordan, Lebanon, and Libya [Roman Architecture]

Registro completo de metadados
MetadadosDescriçãoIdioma
Autor(es): dc.contributorUniversidade Estadual Paulista (UNESP)-
Autor(es): dc.creatorKleiner, Diana E. E.-
Data de aceite: dc.date.accessioned2019-08-21T18:35:56Z-
Data de disponibilização: dc.date.available2019-08-21T18:35:56Z-
Data de envio: dc.date.issued2016-10-26-
Data de envio: dc.date.issued2016-10-26-
Fonte completa do material: dc.identifierhttp://acervodigital.unesp.br/handle/unesp/369812-
Fonte completa do material: dc.identifierhttp://objetoseducacionais2.mec.gov.br/handle/mec/13440-
Fonte: dc.identifier.urihttp://educapes.capes.gov.br/handle/capes/476019-
Descrição: dc.descriptionEducação Superior::Ciências Sociais Aplicadas::Arquitetura e Urbanismo-
Descrição: dc.descriptionPresents a class where Professor Kleiner features the baroque phenomenon in Roman architecture, in which the traditional vocabulary of architecture, consisting of columns and other conventional architectural elements, is manipulated to enliven building façades and inject them with dynamic motion. This baroque trend is often conspicuously ornamental and began to be deployed on the walls of forums and tombs in Italy already in the late first century A.D. But baroque architecture in Roman antiquity was foremost in the Greek East where high-quality marble and expert marble carvers made it the architectural mode of choice. At Petra in Jordan, tomb chambers were cut into cliffs and elaborate façades carved out of the living rock. The cities of Miletus and Ephesus in Asia Minor were adorned with gates and fountains and libraries and stage buildings that consisted of multi-storied columnar screens. The lecture culminates with the Sanctuary of Jupiter Heliopolitanus, a massive temple complex at Baalbek in Lebanon, with Temples of Jupiter and Bacchus in enormous scale and with extreme embellishment, and the Temple of Venus with an undulating lintel that foreshadows the curvilinear flourishes of Francesco Borromini's S. Carlo alle Quattro Fontane in seventeenth-century Rome-
Descrição: dc.descriptionEducação Superior::Linguística, Letras e Artes::Artes-
Publicador: dc.publisherYale University, Open Yale Courses-
Relação: dc.relationBaroque Extravaganzas.mp3-
Direitos: dc.rightsYale University 2009. Some rights reserved. Unless otherwise indicated in the applicable Credits section of certain lecture pages, all content on this web site is licensed under a Creative Commons License. Please refer to the Credits section to determine whether third-party restrictions on the use of content apply-
Palavras-chave: dc.subjectEducação Superior::Ciências Sociais Aplicadas::Arquitetura e Urbanismo::História da Arquitetura e Urbanismo-
Palavras-chave: dc.subjectRoman history-
Palavras-chave: dc.subjectRoman architecture-
Palavras-chave: dc.subjectEducação Superior::Linguística, Letras e Artes::Artes::História da Arte-
Título: dc.titleBaroque extravaganzas: rock tombs, fountains, and sanctuaries in Jordan, Lebanon, and Libya [Roman Architecture]-
Tipo de arquivo: dc.typeáudio-
Aparece nas coleções:Repositório Institucional - Acervo Digital Unesp

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