Preferred Title:
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Canonica, Sant'Ambrogio
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Alternate Title:
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Portico della Canonica
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Image View:
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Entry arch, view looking up at rear left corner, depicting vault
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Creator:
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Donato Bramante (Italian architect, 1444-1514); Ludovico Sforza, Duke of Milan (Italian patron, 1452-1508)
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Location:
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site: Sant'Ambrogio (Milan, Lombardy, Italy)
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Date:
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1492-1499 (creation)
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Cultural Context:
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Italian
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Style Period:
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Renaissance
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Work Type 1:
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arcade
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Classification:
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architectural elements
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Material:
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brick; stone
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Technique:
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carving (processes); construction (assembling)
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Relation Work:
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formerly part of Sant'Ambrogio
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Subjects:
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architectural exteriors; rulers and leaders; Ludovico Sforza, Duke of Milan, 1452-1508; vault
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Description:
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[In 1930 the main campus of the Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore moved into the old monastery of Sant'Ambrogio.] Around 1492 the Duke of Milan commissioned Bramante to design the courtyard known as the Canonica at the Romanesque abbey church of S Ambrogio, Milan. The courtyard, of which only two incomplete sides were ever built, abuts the north wall of the church; its main axis is marked by a doorway into the building. On each side there are 11 arches, which, except at the centre, are supported on columns with Corinthian capitals. The central arch, twice as wide and almost twice as tall as the others, is supported on slender piers, each faced with a pilaster and raised on a tall pedestal. The columns next to the piers and those at the angles were made to resemble tree trunks. This motif, apart from being an emblem of the Duke, provides a learned antiquarian reference to the historical ancestry of the column as described by Vitruvius and illustrated by both Filarete and Francesco di Giorgio in their treati
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Collection:
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Archivision Addition Module Two
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Identifier:
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1A1-BD-PC-D2
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Rights:
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© Scott Gilchrist, Archivision, Inc.
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