Page:Character of Renaissance Architecture.djvu/118

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been validated.
88
ARCHITECTURE OF THE RENAISSANCE
chap.

adjusted as in that ancient monument, save for its oval plan, but the rest of the composition is pretty clearly from the same source. To realize this it is necessary only to eliminate, in idea, the portico of the Pantheon with the exception of its pediment, and to conceive this pediment as drawn back into the plane of the rectangular façade. The pediment would then surmount the order of Corinthian pilasters which adorn this façade, and the

Fig. 46.—Sant' Andrea di Ponte Molle.

resulting composition would be substantially identical with that of the façade of St. Andrea. The minor differences are unimportant, as where Vignola has placed a pair of pilasters, instead of only one, at each end of the façade, has given the whole order more shallow relief, and has omitted the fluting on the pilasters. Even the niches on either side of the portal are reproduced from the Pantheon, though Vignola has pierced them with windows.

The likeness extends farther. The return of the entablature