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Father  of Fountain Design: Gian Bernini

Article Description:
====================

For centuries, visitors to Rome have admired the architecture and
art of this great European city. Its famous outdoor water
fountains, piazzas, churches and cathedrals draw many thousands
of visitors each year, as do its countless art galleries. No less
an attraction is Vatican City, in the heart of Rome, and its
principal building, the Basilica of St. Peter.


Additional Article Information:
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876 Words; formatted to 65 Characters per Line
Distribution Date and Time: 2007-03-06 10:00:00

Written By:     Elizabeth Jean
Copyright:      2007
Contact Email:  mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]



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Father  of Fountain Design: Gian Bernini
Copyright (c) 2007 Elizabeth Jean
Garden Fountains
http://www.garden-fountains.com



For centuries, visitors to Rome have admired the architecture and
art of this great European city. Its famous outdoor water
fountains, piazzas, churches and cathedrals draw many thousands
of visitors each year, as do its countless art galleries. No less
an attraction is Vatican City, in the heart of Rome, and its
principal building, the Basilica of St. Peter.

Gian Lorenzo Bernini played an important role in the creation of
some of Italy's finest sculpture, fountains, and architecture.
He lived from 1598-1680 and was the son of a sculptor, Pietro
Bernini. Gian Lorenzo was born in Naples, but his family moved to
Rome while he was still a child. In his early 20s, Bernini was
already producing notable fountains for his first patron,
Cardinal Scipione Borghese and he was to receive papal patronage
for much of his career, resulting in contributions to the design
of some of Rome's finest religious buildings and fountains,
including St. Peter's Basilica.

The Fountains of Bernini

Bernini's papal patronage allowed him to work on a wide variety
of fountains, statues, churches and monuments, and he was
particularly noted for two of his fountains - the Triton
Fountain, in the Piazza Barberini, and the Fontana Dei Quattro
Fiumi, or Fountain of Four Rivers, in the Piazza Navona.

The Triton Fountain

Bernini was commissioned to create the Triton Fountain in the
early 1640s by his then patron Pope Urban VIII. Urban's brief
was for Bernini to create a fountain to mark the reopening of the
Aqua Felice aqueduct, which Urban had instituted, and which
supplied the fountain.

The Triton Fountain was Bernini's first fountain, and presented
a marked contrast to many of Rome's earlier fountains.
Traditionally designed to be a means of delivering water from the
aqueducts to the people of Rome, they were often plain and simple
or formal and unimaginative in design. Unusual decorative
fountains had previously been the preserve of wealthy Roman
citizens, who used them to form the centerpiece of their villas'
gardens. Roman styled fountains for your own garden can be found
at http://www.garden-fountains.com.

Triton was an appropriate choice for a civilization that had such
an advanced ability to supply and distribute water, and the
fountain itself portrays Triton, god of the sea, holding a conch
shell to his lips, from which a stream of water flows.

The Four Rivers Fountain

After the passing of Pope Urban VIII, Bernini was temporarily
without papal patronage, having not yet formed a very close
relationship with Urban's successor, Pope Innocent X. However, a
competition to design a fountain for the Piazza Navona gave
Bernini the opportunity to win over the new Pope.

The story goes that the Pope had declined to request a proposal
from Bernini for the new fountain's design, but Bernini was
persuaded to create one anyway. This design was subsequently
modeled and installed in Innocent's palace, the Palazzo
Pamphilj, so that the Pope could not avoid seeing it.

Once Innocent had seen Bernini's design, he was unable to
prevent himself from commissioning Bernini to produce the
fountain, such was the brilliance of his concept.

The Four Rivers fountain symbolically depicts the major rivers of
four continents - the Nile in Africa, the Ganges in Asia, the
Danube in Europe and the River Plate in the Americas. Each
continent is represented by a river god, and they surround the
centre of the fountain, which was designed to look like a mound
of rocks, but in fact had been carefully designed to support a
towering Egyptian Obelisk, the centerpiece of the fountain.

A New Approach

Bernini's fountains were almost theatrical in the spectacle they
presented, and his ability to combine the dramatic with the
practical - fountains were still used to supply water - was
unprecedented. Fountains such as the Four Rivers demonstrated his
grasp not only of sculpture and design, but of engineering
principles.

Bernini's Other Triumphs

Sculpture

While his fountains remain conspicuous for their originality and
drama, Bernini's other work was equally successful. Today, four
of his most famous sculptures can be seen in the Borghese
Gallery:

 * David
 * Rape of Proserpine
 * Apollo & Daphne
 * Aeneas with Anchises and Ascanius

These works were all completed for his original patron, Cardinal
Scipione Borghese and demonstrate his remarkable talent for both
storytelling and sculpture.
Architecture

As a result of the papal patronage Bernini enjoyed for much of
his working life, he was heavily involved in the architectural
development of St Peter's, and indeed was its official architect
for many years.

The design of the giant piazza that leads to the Basilica was
Bernini's work, and he himself likened it to two arms, reaching
out to invite people into St. Peter's. One of his last projects
was also a church, but unusually for him a new design, rather
than an evolution of an existing building. Bernini considered the
church of S. Andrea del Quirinale his masterpiece, and spent many
hours gazing at it in his retirement.

Gian Lorenzo Bernini

Bernini passed away in 1680, at the age of 81. He was by then
widely regarded as one of Italy's finest aesthetes, and one of
the men responsible for creating and defining the Baroque school
of design, as well many water fountains that are still regarded
today as some of the finest in history.




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Written by Elizabeth Jean for http://www.Garden-Fountains.com 
For more information, visit The Father of Fountain Design 
(http://www.garden-fountains.com/articles/bernini-biography.html)


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