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Ospedale degli Innocenti: Facade facing courtyard showing nine bay loggia and ceramic tondos

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posted on 2017-07-03, 00:00 authored by G. Massiot & cie
The equestrian statue of Ferdinand I of Tuscany was made by Giambologna and placed there in 1608. The fountain was added in 1640.\u000a\u000aThe Ospedale was an asylum or hospice for foundling children. The plan of the complex (1419-1424) reveals a new order and symmetry; the most revolutionary part of the building, however, is the fa\u00E7ade, which was the first since antiquity to use the vocabulary of Classical Roman architecture and thus constitutes the first structure of the Renaissance. Above each column is a ceramic tondo. These were originally meant by Brunelleschi to be blank concavities, but ca. 1487, Andrea della Robbia was commissioned to fill them in. The design features a baby in swaddling clothes on a blue wheel.

History

Alt Title

Hospital of the Innocents

Date Created

1910-01-01

Date Modified

2017-07-03

Spatial Coverage

Florence, Tuscany, Italy: Piazza Santissima Annunziata|+43.776308+11.261214|Florence

Temporal Coverage

before or circa 1910

Cultural Context

Renaissance

Rights Statement

To view the physical lantern slide, please contact the Architecture Library.

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