TheIonic orderis one of the three canonicordersofclassical architecture,the other two being theDoricand theCorinthian.There are two lesser orders: theTuscan(a plainer Doric), and the rich variant of Corinthian called thecomposite order.Of the three classical canonic orders, the Corinthian order has the narrowest columns, followed by the Ionic order, with the Doric order having the widest columns.
The Ionic capital is characterized by the use ofvolutes.The Ioniccolumnsnormally stand on a base which separates the shaft of the column from thestylobateor platform while the cap is usually enriched withegg-and-dart.
The ancient architect and architectural historianVitruviusassociates the Ionic with feminine proportions (the Doric representing the masculine).[1]
Description
editCapital
editThe major features of the Ionic order are thevolutesof itscapital,which have been the subject of much theoretical and practical discourse, based on a brief and obscure passage inVitruvius.[2]The only tools required to design these features were a straight-edge, a right angle, string (to establish half-lengths) and a compass. Below the volutes, the Ionic column may have a wide collar or banding separating the capital from theflutedshaft (as in, for example, theneoclassicalmansionCastle Coole), or a swag of fruit and flowers may swing from the clefts or "neck" formed by the volutes.
Originally, the volutes lay in a single plane (illustration at right); then it was seen that they could be angled out on the corners. This feature of the Ionic order made it more pliant and satisfactory than the Doric to critical eyes in the 4th century BC: angling the volutes on the corner columns ensured that they "read" equally when seen from either front or side facade. However, some classical artists viewed this as unsatisfactory, feeling that the placement of Ionic columns at building corners required a distortion at the expense of the capital's structural logic; theCorinthian orderwould solve this by reading equally well from all angles.[3]The 16th-century Renaissance architect and theoristVincenzo Scamozzidesigned a version of such a perfectly four-sided Ionic capital that it became standard; when a Greek Ionic order was eventually reintroduced in the later 18th centuryGreek Revival,it conveyed an air of archaic freshness and primitive, perhaps even republican, vitality.[4]
Columns and entablature
editThe Ioniccolumnis always more slender than the Doric; therefore, it always has a base:[5]Ionic columns are eight and nine column-diameters tall, and even more in theAntebellumcolonnades of late American Greek Revival plantation houses.[citation needed]
Ionic columns are most oftenfluted.After a little early experimentation, the number of hollow flutes in the shaft settled at 24. This standardization kept the fluting in a familiar proportion to the diameter of the column at any scale, even when the height of the column was exaggerated. Unlike Greek Doric fluting, which runs out to anarrisor sharp edge, that was easily damaged by people brushing it as they passed by, Ionic fluting leaves a little flat-seeming surface of the column surface between each hollow (in fact it is a small segment of a circle around the column).[6]
In some instances, the fluting has been omitted. English architectInigo Jonesintroduced a note of sobriety with plain Ionic columns on hisBanqueting House, Whitehall,London, and when Beaux-Arts architectJohn Russell Popewanted to convey the manly stamina combined with intellect ofTheodore Roosevelt,he left colossal Ionic columns unfluted on the Roosevelt memorial at theAmerican Museum of Natural History,New York City, for an unusual impression of strength and stature. Wabash Railroad architect R.E. Mohr included eight unfluted Ionic frontal columns on his 1928 design for the railroad'sDelmar Boulevard stationin St. Louis.
Theentablatureresting on the columns has three parts: a plainarchitravedivided into two, or more generally three, bands, with afriezeresting on it that may be richly sculptural, and acornicebuilt up withdentils(like the closely spaced ends of joists), with a corona ( "crown" ) and cyma ( "ogee" )moldingto support the projecting roof. Pictorial, often narrative,bas-relieffrieze carving provides a characteristic feature of the Ionic order, in the area where the Doric order is articulated withtriglyphs.Roman and Renaissance practice condensed the height of the entablature by reducing the proportions of the architrave, which made the frieze more prominent.
Anta capital
editThe Ionic anta capital is the Ionic version of theanta capital,the crowning portion of ananta,which is the front edge of a supporting wall inGreek templearchitecture. The anta is generally crowned by a stone block designed to spread the load from superstructure (entablature) it supports, called an "anta capital" when it is structural, or sometimes "pilastercapital "if it is only decorative as often during the Roman period.
In order not to protrude unduly from the wall, these anta capitals usually display a rather flat surface, so that the capital has more or less a rectangular-shaped structure overall. The Ionic anta capital, in contrast to the regular column capitals, is highly decorated and generally includes bands of alternatinglotusesandflame palmettes,and bands ofeggs and dartsandbeads and reelspatterns, in order to maintain continuity with the decorative frieze lining the top of the walls. This difference with the column capitals disappeared with Roman times when anta or pilaster capitals have designs very similar to those of the column capitals.[7][8]The Ionic anta capitals as can be seen in the Ionic order temple of theErechtheion(circa 410 BCE), are characteristically rectangular Ionic anta capitals, with extensive bands of floral patterns in prolongation of adjoiningfriezes.
History of use
editThe Ionic order originated in the mid-6th century BC inIonia(broadly equivalent to modern dayİzmir Province), as well as the southwestern coastland and islands ofAsia Minorsettled byIonians,whereIonic Greekwas spoken. The Ionic order column was being practiced in mainland Greece in the 5th century BC. It was most popular in theArchaic Period(750–480 BC) in Ionia. The first of the great Ionic temples was theTemple of HeraonSamos,built about 570–560 BC by the architectRhoikos.It stood for only a decade before it was leveled by an earthquake. A longer-lasting 6th century Ionic temple was theTemple of ArtemisatEphesus,one of theSeven Wonders of the Ancient World.TheParthenon,although it conforms mainly to the Doric order, also has some Ionic elements. A more purely Ionic mode to be seen on theAthenian Acropolisis exemplified in theErechtheum.
Following the conquests ofAlexander the Greatin the east, a few examples of the Ionic order can be found as far asPakistanwith theJandial templenearTaxila.Several examples of capitals displaying Ionic influences can be seen as far away asPatna,India,especially with thePataliputra capital,dated to the 3rd century BC, and seemingly derived from the design of the Ionic anta capital,[9][10]or theSarnath capital,which has been described as "Perso-Ionic",[11]or "quasi-Ionic".[12][13][14]
Vitruvius,a practicing architect who worked in the time ofAugustus,reports that the Doric column had its initial basis in the proportions of the male body, while Ionic columns took on a "slenderness" inspired by the female body.[15]Though he does not name his source for such a self-conscious and "literary" approach, it must be in traditions passed on fromHellenisticarchitects, such asHermogenes of Priene,the architect of a famed temple of Artemis atMagnesia on the Meanderin Lydia (now Türkiye).
Renaissancearchitectural theorists took his hints to interpret the Ionic order as matronly in comparison to the Doric order, though not as wholly feminine as the Corinthian order. The Ionic is a natural order for post-Renaissance libraries and courts of justice, learned and civilized. Because no treatises on classical architecture survive earlier than that of Vitruvius, identification of such "meaning" in architectural elements as it was understood in the 5th and 4th centuries BC remains tenuous, though during the Renaissance it became part of the conventional "speech" of classicism.[16]
From the 17th century onwards, a much admired and copied version of Ionic was that which could be seen in theTemple of Fortuna Virilisin Rome, first clearly presented in a detailed engraving inAntoine Desgodetz,Les edifices antiques de Rome(Paris 1682).
Gallery
edit-
19th century illustration of multiplepolychromeelements ofAncient Greek architecture,including an Ionic capital in the top left, byJacques Ignace Hittorff
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Ancient GreekArchaicIonic capital of theSphinx of Naxos,c.560 BC,Naxian marble,Delphi Archaeological Museum,Delphi,Greece[17]
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Ancient Greek Ionic order of theTemple of Artemis Agrotera,Athens,c.440 BC-destroyed in 1778
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Ancient Greek Ionic columns in theTemple of Apollo at Bassae,Bassae,Greece, illustration byCharles Robert Cockerell,unknown architect,c.429-400 BC[18]
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Ancient Greek Ionic columns of theErechtheion,Athens, Greece, with parallel volutes, unknown architect, 421-405 BC[19]
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Ancient Near EasternIonic columns of arock-cuttomb atQyzqapan,Iraq,unknown architect, 5th-4th centuries BC[20]
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RomanIonic corner capital from theTemple of Portunus,Rome, with two sides with volutes, and one for the corner of the facade projecting at a 45° angle, unknown architect, early 4th century BC
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Roman Ionic columns of theTemple of Saturn,Rome, with diagonal volutes, unknown architect, 3rd of 4th centuries[22]
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ByzantineIonic capital in theHagia Sophia,Istanbul,Turkey,byAnthemius of TrallesorIsidore of Miletus,6th century[23]
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Baroque Ionic columns on the garden façade of thePalace of Versailles,Versailles,France, byJules Hardouin-Mansart,1678–1688[25]
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BaroqueIonic capital at the top of the base of a cup, byMichel Debourg,1686-1687, jade and gilded silver, Louvre[26]
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Baroque Ionic columns in theKarlskirche,Vienna,Austria,1715–1737, byJohann Bernhard Fischer von Erlach[27]
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BaroqueSolomonicIonic columns of theMonastery of San Francisco,Antigua,Guatemala,unknown architect, early 17th century[28]
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RococoIonic columns inVierges modernes,painted byJean Raoux,1728, oil on canvas,Palais des Beaux-Arts de Lille,Lille,France
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Rococo Ionic pilasters on the facade of theAmalienburg,Nymphenburg Palace Park,Munich,Germany, byFrançois de Cuvilliés,1734-1739[29]
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Rococo pilasters on the facade of theÉglise Saint-Jacques de Tarascon,Tarascon,France, byJean-Baptiste FranqueandAntoine Damour,2nd half of the 18th century[30]
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Louis XVI stylecaryatids with Ionic capitals on their heads, on a jewelry locket ofMarie-Antoinette,byFerdinand Schwerdfeger,1787, mahogany,mother-of-pearlinlays, paintings under glass, porcelain plate, and gilded bronzes,Chambre de la Reine,Palace of Versailles,Versailles,France[32]
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Greek RevivalIonic columns of the Branch Bank of the United States, now in the Charles Engelhard Court of theMetropolitan Museum of Art,New York City, inspired by those of the Temple of Artemis Agrotera in Athens, byMartin E. Thompson,1824
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Neoclassical reinterpetation of the Ionic order, withacanthusesjust above the base and ram horn-shaped volutes, of theFontaine Cuvier,Paris, designed byAlphonse Vigoureuxand sculpted byJean-Jacques FeuchèreandPierre-Jules Pomateau,1840-1846
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Greek Revival Ionic columns of the main building of theAcademy of Athens,inspired by those of the Erechtheum in Athens, byTheophilus Hansen,1859-1885
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Neoclassical Ionic columns of the Town Hall of the1st arrondissement of Paris,byJacques Ignace Hittorff,1858-1860
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Neoclassical Ionic capital with afestoonbetween itsvolutes,part of the entrance portico of theVilla Eilenroc,Antibes,France, byCharles Garnier,1860-1867
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Neoclassical Ionic pilasters on the façade of theGare du Nord,Paris, by Jacques Ignace Hittorff, 1861-1865[33]
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Art Nouveaurailing with highly stylized reinterpretations of the Ionic column as balusters, on theFrance-Lanord Building(Avenue Fochno. 71),Nancy,France, byÉmile André,1904[35]
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Beaux Arts Ionic columns on the facade of theDucourneau Theater,Agen,France, byGuillaume Tronchet,1906-1908
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PolychromeGreek RevivalIonic capitals in theWashington Union Station,Washington, D.C.,US, byDaniel Burnham,c.1907
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Beaux Arts Ionic pilasters in the entrance hallway of theRue de la Paixno. 23, Paris, unknown architect, 1908
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Beaux Arts Ionic columns and pilasters of theCantacuzino Palace,Florești,Romania, byIon D. Berindey,1910-1916
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Beaux Arts Ionic pilasters on the facade of the Hôtel Roxoroid de Belfort (Avenue Bugeaudno. 29), Paris, 1911, byAndré Arfvidson
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Conspicuous Greek Revival Ionic capital in theNew Orleans Museum of Art,New Orleans,US, inspired by those of the Erechtheum in Athens, bySamuel Abraham Marx,1911
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Neoclassical Ionic columns in aSecessionitposter, byFranz Stuck,1911,lithograph,Poster Collection of the Basel School of Design,Basel,Switzerland
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Art Deco and Neoclassical Ionic pilasters in theSeverance Hall,Cleveland,US, byWalker and Weeks,1931
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StalinistIonic columns of the Colonels' Quarter (Șoseaua Pandurino. 60-62), Bucharest, 1950–1960, by I.Novițchi, C.Ionescu, C.Hacker and A.Șerbescu[36]
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Postmodernreinterpretation of the Ionic column as the Capitello seating, designed byStudio 65and produced byGufram,differentiated-densitypolyurethanefoam coated with latex rubber, 1972, unknown location[37]
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Postmodern vase inspired by the Ionic capital, designed byMichael GravesforSwid Powell,1989, glazed porcelain,Indianapolis Museum of Art,Indianapolis,US[38]
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New ClassicalGreek Revival Ionic columns in theGonville and Caius CollegeHall,Cambridge,UK, inspired by those from the Temple of Apollo at Bassaem byJohn Simpson,1998
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Postmodern reinterpretations of Ionic columns of theJacksonville Public Library,Jacksonville,US, byRobert A. M. Stern,2005
See also
editNotes
edit- ^Vitruvius.De architectura.p. 4.1. Archived fromthe originalon 31 March 2022.Retrieved25 April2020.
- ^"Geometric Methods of the 1500s for Laying Out the Ionic Volute"Archived2005-12-28 at theWayback MachineDenise Andrey and Mirko Galli,Nexus Network Journal,vol. 6 no. 2 (Autumn 2004), pp. 31–48. DOI 10.1007/s00004-004-0017-4.
- ^De la Croix, Horst; Tansey, Richard G.; Kirkpatrick, Diane (1991).Gardner's Art Through the Ages(9th ed.). Thomson/Wadsworth. p.170.ISBN0-15-503769-2.
- ^A brief and accessible sketch of this familiar aspect of the Greek Revival "idea of primitivism, of searching back to the true, untainted sources of architectural beauty" (p. 38) and of theUtopianaspects ofLedouxis briskly treated in SirJohn Summerson,The Classical Language of Architecture(MIT Press) 1963; in discussions of American Greek Revival, the republic connotations of the Greek orders present an inescapable commonplace: "The Greek Revival style arose out of a young nation's desire to identify with the ideals of the ancient Greek Republic." ((Rensselaer County Historical Society) "Architectural Styles in Rensselaer County" (New YorkArchived2007-09-23 at theWayback Machine); "Greece, the world's first democracy, seemed an appropriate philosophical reference point for a self-confident new republic." ((Old-House Journal), James C. Massey and Shirley Maxwell, "Greek Revival in America: From Tara to farmhouse temples."Archived2007-12-14 at theWayback Machine) are typical statements, selected almost at random from texts accessible on-line.
- ^Johann Georg Heck (1856).The Art of Building in Ancient and Modern Times, Or, Architecture Illustrated.D. Appleton. p. 25.
- ^Lawrence, A. W.,Greek Architecture,p. 130, 1957, Penguin, Pelican history of art. Lawrence dates this innovation to c. 500 BC
- ^Meyer, F.S.A handbook of ornament.Рипол Классик. p. 214.ISBN9781171715481.Retrieved2016-11-16.
- ^The Classical Language of Architecture by John Summerson, p.47 "Anta" entry[1]
- ^"These flat, splaying members with cavetto sides, have a long history in Greek architecture as anta capitals, and the rolls at upper and lower sides are also seen" John Boardman, "The Origins of Indian Stone Architecture", p.19: "An interesting flat capital which, though differing from the classic forms, bears a distinct resemblance to the capitals of the pilasters of the Temple of Apollo Didymaeos at Miletos"[2]
- ^A Companion to Asian Art and Architecture by Deborah S. Hutton, John Wiley & Sons, 2015, p.438[3]
- ^The Journal Of The Royal Asiatic Society Of Great Britain And Ireland For 1907.1907. p.997.
- ^Banerjee, Gauranga Nath (1920).Hellenism in ancient India.Calcutta. p.46.
- ^Allchin, F. R.; Erdosy, George (1995).The Archaeology of Early Historic South Asia: The Emergence of Cities and States.Cambridge University Press. p. 258 (f).ISBN9780521376952.
- ^Allchin, F. R.; Erdosy, George (1995).The Archaeology of Early Historic South Asia: The Emergence of Cities and States.Cambridge University Press. p. xi, label 11.30.ISBN9780521376952.
- ^Vitruvius(1914) [ca. 30–15 BC].The Ten Books on Architecture.Translated byMorgan, Morris H.Cambridge: Harvard University Press. p. 104.
Thus in the invention of the two different kinds of columns, they borrowed manly beauty, naked and unadorned, for the one, and for the other the delicacy, adornment, and proportions characteristic of women.
- ^Summerson 1963.
- ^Papaioannou, Kostas (1975).L’art grec(in French). Mazenod. p. 607.
- ^Watkin, David (2022).A History of Western Architecture.Laurence King. p. 40.ISBN978-1-52942-030-2.
- ^Watkin, David (2022).A History of Western Architecture.Laurence King. p. 38.ISBN978-1-52942-030-2.
- ^Bahrani, Zainab (2017).La Mesopotamia - Arte e Architettura(in Italian). Einaudi. p. 300.ISBN978-8806235109.
- ^Wheeler, Mortimer (1964).Roman Art and Architecture.Thames & Hudson. p. 61 & 239.ISBN978-0500200216.
- ^Hopkins 2014,p. 14.
- ^Hodge 2019,p. 62.
- ^Watkin, David (2022).A History of Western Architecture.Laurence King. p. 292.ISBN978-1-52942-030-2.
- ^Martin, Henry (1927).Le Style Louis XIV(in French). Flammarion. p. 21.
- ^"Coupe ronde".collections.louvre.fr.Retrieved6 September2024.
- ^Jones 2014,p. 230.
- ^Grube, Nikolai; Eggebrecht, Eva; Seidel, Matthias (2012).Maya - Divine Kings of the Rain Forest.h.f.ullmann. p. 385.ISBN978-3-8480-0034-0.
- ^Hodge 2019,p. 95.
- ^"Eglise Saint-Jacques".pop.culture.gouv.fr.Retrieved13 September2023.
- ^Watkin, David (2022).A History of Western Architecture.Laurence King. p. 384.ISBN978-1-52942-030-2.
- ^"Serre-bijoux de Marie-Antoinette".Retrieved21 September2023.
- ^Watkin, David (2022).A History of Western Architecture.Laurence King. p. 444.ISBN978-1-52942-030-2.
- ^Jones 2014,p. 294.
- ^"Immeuble France-Lanord".pop.culture.gouv.fr.Retrieved21 July2024.
- ^Mariana Celac, Octavian Carabela and Marius Marcu-Lapadat (2017).Bucharest Architecture - an annotated guide.Ordinul Arhitecților din România. p. 181.ISBN978-973-0-23884-6.
- ^Gura, Judith (2017).Postmodern Design Complete.Thames & Hudson. p. 466.ISBN978-0-500-51914-1.
- ^Gura, Judith (2017).Postmodern Design Complete.Thames & Hudson. p. 335.ISBN978-0-500-51914-1.
- ^Gura, Judith (2017).Postmodern Design Complete.Thames & Hudson. p. 65.ISBN978-0-500-51914-1.
References
edit- Hodge, Susie (2019).The Short Story of Architecture.Laurence King Publishing.ISBN978-1-7862-7370-3.
- Hopkins, Owen (2014).Architectural Styles: A Visual Guide.Laurence King.ISBN978-178067-163-5.
- Jones, Denna, ed. (2014).Architecture The Whole Story.Thames & Hudson.ISBN978-0-500-29148-1.
External links
edit- Ionic order exemplified in architecture of Buffalo, New York
- Ionic order, after VitruviusArchived from the originalon August 26, 2005
- "Understanding buildings" website:Ionic order
- Denis Andrey and Mirko Galli, "Geometric methods of the 1500s for laying out the ionic volute"
- Early Development and Formal Definition of the Ionic Capital
- Classical orders and elements