Polychrome Roof Tiles and National Style in Nineteenth-century Croatia (CROSBI ID 177794)
Prilog u časopisu | izvorni znanstveni rad | međunarodna recenzija
Podaci o odgovornosti
Damjanović, Dragan
engleski
Polychrome Roof Tiles and National Style in Nineteenth-century Croatia
Gothic architecture, revived and decorated with motifs borrowed from folk art, provided the foundation for the creation of a Croatian national style in the last quarter of the nineteenth century. Dragan Damjanović explains how the Viennese architect Friedrich Schmidt and his student and collaborator Herman Bollé created the signature architecture of this movement, the brilliantly colored and boldly patterned tile roofs of St. Mark's church (restored 1875–82), Zagreb cathedral (restored 1878–1902), and the church of the Blessed Virgin Mary in Marija Bistrica (restored 1878–85). In Polychrome Roof Tiles and National Style in Nineteenth-century Croatia, this architecture is placed in the context of the Gothic Revival in the Austro-Hungarian monarchy and the collecting and analysis of traditional textiles by the amateur ethnographer Felix (Srećko) Lay.
Glazed Polychrome Roof Tiles ; Friedrich von Schmidt ; Herman Bollé ; Josip Vancaš ; Max Kropf ; Imre Steindl ; Budimpešta ; Korneuburg ; Klosterneuburg ; Beč ; Laxenburg ; Zagreb ; St. Mark's Church ; Zagreb Cathedral ; Marija Bistrica ; Desinić
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Podaci o izdanju
70 (4)
2011.
466-491
objavljeno
0037-9808
2150-5926
10.1525/jsah.2011.70.4.466
Povezanost rada
Arhitektura i urbanizam, Povijest, Povijest umjetnosti