Horatio Greenough, ‘American Architecture’

2021 ◽  
pp. 261-269
Author(s):  
Clive Edwards
Author(s):  
Paul Niell

The Baroque in Ibero-American Architecture and Urbanism, in parts of the Americas formerly comprising the Spanish and Portuguese empires, has been traditionally studied as a question of adherence to or deviation from a Counter-Reformation style promoted primarily by ecclesiastical institutions. This article expands upon what is meant by “Baroque” in the architecture and urbanism of the Iberian empires in the Americas. Through the analysis of urban plans, images of the city, architectural interiors and exteriors, physical urban spaces, and other forms of material culture, this article argues that Ibero-American architecture and urbanism in the age of the Baroque belonged to a phenomenon of ordering and thereby creating the “New World” as ideologically constituted colonial spaces that reified social and political norms. Furthermore, human subjects actively negotiated the spaces created by architecture and the city, making the American Baroque also part of a process of negotiating order and thereby producing American spaces.


Design ◽  
1951 ◽  
Vol 52 (8) ◽  
pp. 16-22
Author(s):  
Ralph M. Pearson

1952 ◽  
Vol 34 (3) ◽  
pp. 243-244
Author(s):  
Fiske Kimball

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