Antoni Gaudi was a Spanish architect known for pioneering Catalan Modernism. Some of his most important works include La Sagrada Familia church in Barcelona, which he worked on from 1883 until his death but was not finished; El Capricho villa in Comillas, Spain built from 1883-1885; Casa Vicens in Barcelona from 1883-1888, considered one of the first Art Nouveau buildings; and Finca Güell in Barcelona from 1884-1887.
Antoni Gaudi was a Spanish architect known for pioneering Catalan Modernism. Some of his most important works include La Sagrada Familia church in Barcelona, which he worked on from 1883 until his death but was not finished; El Capricho villa in Comillas, Spain built from 1883-1885; Casa Vicens in Barcelona from 1883-1888, considered one of the first Art Nouveau buildings; and Finca Güell in Barcelona from 1884-1887.
Antoni Gaudi was a Spanish architect known for pioneering Catalan Modernism. Some of his most important works include La Sagrada Familia church in Barcelona, which he worked on from 1883 until his death but was not finished; El Capricho villa in Comillas, Spain built from 1883-1885; Casa Vicens in Barcelona from 1883-1888, considered one of the first Art Nouveau buildings; and Finca Güell in Barcelona from 1884-1887.
Antoni Gaudi was a Spanish architect known for pioneering Catalan Modernism. Some of his most important works include La Sagrada Familia church in Barcelona, which he worked on from 1883 until his death but was not finished; El Capricho villa in Comillas, Spain built from 1883-1885; Casa Vicens in Barcelona from 1883-1888, considered one of the first Art Nouveau buildings; and Finca Güell in Barcelona from 1884-1887.
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
Download as ppt, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 14
Students: Course : 4º A
Index 1. Biography 2. Professional life. Works 3. Expiatory Temple La Sagrada Familia 4. Conclusion 1. BIOGRAPHY.
Antoni Gaudí i Cornet was a Spanish architect and is the
best known practitioner of Catalan Modernism. Gaudi was born in Reus in 1852 and died in Barcelona in the year 1926. 1860 - He begins his primary education at the school run by Berenguer in Reus. In 1863, he joins the Piarist school in Reus. 1869 - At the age of 17, he moves with his family to Barcelona and enrols at the Middle Education Institute as a pupil entitled to sit exams but under no obligation to attend classes. He lives with his brother Francesc who studies medicine. He studies elements of physics and natural history. He registers at the University of Barcelona Faculty of Sciences, where he studies a foundation course in architecture with a view to entering the Provincial School of Architecture. 1. BIOGRAPHY.
1873 – To finance his studies, he works as a draughtsman
for the master builder Josep Fontserè i Mestres, who at the time was in charge of the urbanization of the Ciutadella de Barcelona park. He continued to contribute to the park works until 1878. Gaudi begins the admission courses at the Barcelona Provincial School of Architecture. In 1875, he passes the foundation course. 1876 – His mother dies, Antònia Cornet i Bertran. 1878 – On 15 March, he officially qualifies as an architect. 1879 – He becomes a Member of the Catalanist Association of Scientific Excursions. 1880 - Gaudi is a member of the organising committee of the Exhibition of the Industrial Arts. This exhibition is held in December in the central offices of Foment del Treball in Barcelona. 1. BIOGRAPHY.
1906 – He buys the Park Güell show house, built by
Francesc Berenguer i Mestres, and moves into it with his father and niece. That same year, his father dies, Francesc Gaudí. 1912 – Her niece Rosa Egea i Gaudí dies at the age of 36. 1818 – His protector and patron, Eusebi Güell i Bacigalupi, dies at the Larrard house in Park Güell. 1926 – On June 7, a tram runs over him and leaves him badly injured. He dies three days later. On June 12, he is buried in the chapel of Carmen in the crypt of the Sagrada Familia. 2. PROFESSIONAL LIFE. WORKS. 2.1 Professional Life.
In its beginnings, Gaudí is influenced by neo-
Gothic art and certain oriental architectural trends. In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, Gaudí led to modernism. However, the architect went beyond orthodox modernism, creating a personal style based on the observation of nature, going on to use geometric shapes, such as the hyperbolic paraboloid, the hyperboloid, the helicoid and the conoid. All his work is marked by his four great passions in life: architecture, nature, religion and Catalonia. 2. PROFESSIONAL LIFE. WORKS. 2.1 Professional Life.
1867 – At the age of 15, Gaudi draws
illustrations for the handwritten magazine El Arlequín. 1870 – Restoration project for Poblet Monastery. Together with his classmates Eduard Toda i Güell and Josep Ribera, he draws up a restoration project for the Monastery of Santa Maria de Poblet. 2. PROFESSIONAL LIFE. WORKS. 2.1 Professional Life.
1875 – Projects as a student. Gaudi designs a
number of projects for subjects taught at the Barcelona Provincial School of Architecture. These projects include: the water cistern in Ciutadella Park (1875); a project for a general hospital in Barcelona (1876-1877); a project for the Spanish Pavilion at the World’s Fair in Philadelphia (1876); and a fountain for Plaça de Catalunya in Barcelona (1877). His end-of-course project is a design for a university auditorium (1877). 2. PROFESSIONAL LIFE. WORKS. 2.1 Professional Life.
1876 – Drawings for the Sanctuary at
Montserrat. In his capacity as draughtsman for the architect Francesc de Paula del Villar i Lozano, he produces drawings for the apse and niche of the Sanctuary at Montserrat. 1882 – Collaboration with the architect Joan Martorell. Gaudi works as an assistant draughtsman for the architect Joan Martorell i Montells. The architect was building the church of the Sagrat Cor de Jesús School in Barcelona. Gaudi also works for Martorell on the Gothic Revival church of the Silesian in Barcelona. 2. PROFESSIONAL LIFE. WORKS. 2.1 Professional Life.
1883 – Beginning of his professional career
with important works such as Finca Güell or Casa Vicens. 1910 – Gaudi Exhibition in Paris. This exhibition is presented at the Salon of the Société des Beaux-Arts. Gaudi exhibits models, plans and photographs of various works and has the collaboration of the architects Joan Rubió i Bellver and Francesc Berenguer i Mestres. 1911 – Participation in the First National Architecture Salon in Madrid. At the First National Architecture Salon (Madrid), he shows the pieces produced expressly for the Gaudi Exhibition held the previous year in Paris. 2. PROFESSIONAL LIFE. WORKS. 2.2 Gaudí's most important works.
1. “La Sagrada Familia” – (1883- not finished) – Barcelona
2. Professional life. Works. 2.2 Gaudí's most important works.
2. “El Capricho” – (1883-1885) – Comillas (Spain)
"El Capricho" is a modernist building
located a villa in Comillas, Cantabria, Spain, designed by Antoni Gaudí. It was built in 1883-1885 for the summer use of a wealthy client, Máximo Díaz de Quijano. “El Capricho” belongs to the architect's orientalist period. The tower has been compared to a minaret. 2. Professional life. Works. 2.2 Gaudí's most important works.
3. “Casa Vicens” – (1883-1888) – Barcelona
“Casa Vicens" is a house designed by Antoni Gaudí, now a museum. It is located in Barcelona. It is considered one of the first buildings of Art Nouveau and was the first house designed by Gaudí. The style of Casa Vicens is a type of neo-Mudejar architecture, one of the popular styles that can be seen throughout Gaudí's architecture, including the oriental and neoclassical. 2. Professional life. Works. 2.2 Gaudí's most important works.
4. “Finca Güell” – (1884-1887) – Barcelona
“Casa Vicens" is a house designed by Antoni Gaudí, now a museum. It is located in Barcelona. It is considered one of the first buildings of Art Nouveau and was the first house designed by Gaudí. The style of Casa Vicens is a type of neo-Mudejar architecture, one of the popular styles that can be seen throughout Gaudí's architecture, including the oriental and neoclassical.