Innovation and Tradition in Seventeenth- and Early Eighteenth-Century Vaulting Techniques in the Southern Low Countries
A First Assessment
Autor(en): |
Krista de Jonge
Joris Snaet |
---|---|
Medium: | Tagungsbeitrag |
Sprache(n): | Englisch |
Tagung: | Third International Congress on Construction History, Brandenburg University of Technology Cottbus, Germany , 20th-24th May 2009 |
Veröffentlicht in: | Proceedings of the Third International Congress on Construction History [3 Volumes] |
Seite(n): | 445-452 |
Jahr: | 2009 |
Abstrakt: |
Most studies of Southern Netherlandish religious architecture in the Early Modern Period still hold to the view that the ubiquitous rib vault does not have any innovatory character; i.e. is ‘still Gothic'. In this paper we offer a revised assessment, structured around the following ‘problems': 1. wood, stone and iron: composite structures; 2. cupolas and domes; 3. light, perforated brick vaults. Rare, surviving architectural drawings (mostly from the Jesuit milieu) indeed suggest that vault, roof structure and anchoring system constitute one structure conceptually. The most obvious test-case of modernity in vaulting is the (brickwork) cupola and its covering wooden dome, which is also considered a ‘vault' in contemporary archival sources. Thin-shelled brick vaulting pierced by oculi in all quadrants – still mostly unstudied as a technique – evolved towards the end of the seventeenth century as an alternative to ribbed crossing domes in wood and plaster. |