The Matrix Regained: Reflections on the Use of the Grid in the Architectural Theories of Nicolaus Goldmann and Jean-Nicolas-Louis Durand
Author(s) -
J.J.W. Goudeau
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
architectural histories
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.116
H-Index - 2
ISSN - 2050-5833
DOI - 10.5334/ah.cl
Subject(s) - german , relation (database) , architecture , architectural theory , art history , matrix (chemical analysis) , history of architecture , philosophy , art , visual arts , linguistics , computer science , materials science , composite material , database
In addition to the superficial visual similarities between the architectural theories of the Silesian-born, seventeenth-century Dutch mathematician Nicolaus Goldmann and the early nineteenth-century French architect Jean-Nicolas-Louis Durand, there is a more profound interconnection: their use of the grid. This article evaluates the relation between the two theories and argues how Durand could have been influenced by Goldmann’s writings. It turns out to be more than likely that the two were linked by Durand´s German pupils who brought the tradition of German eighteenth-century architectural theory with them. This corpus was nourished by Leonhard Christoph Sturm´s ‘Goldmannic’ architecture
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