Alessandro Pompei
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Count Alessandro Pompei (6 July 17051 October 1772) was an Italian architect, art theorist and painter.


Biography


Early career

Pompei was born in
Verona Verona ( ; ; or ) is a city on the Adige, River Adige in Veneto, Italy, with 255,131 inhabitants. It is one of the seven provincial capitals of the region, and is the largest city Comune, municipality in the region and in Northeast Italy, nor ...
. His father was a wealthy Veronese noble, and his mother came from a noble family in
Vicenza Vicenza ( , ; or , archaically ) is a city in northeastern Italy. It is in the Veneto region, at the northern base of the Monte Berico, where it straddles the Bacchiglione, River Bacchiglione. Vicenza is approximately west of Venice and e ...
. Pompei attended the Collegio dei Nobili at
Parma Parma (; ) is a city in the northern Italian region of Emilia-Romagna known for its architecture, Giuseppe Verdi, music, art, prosciutto (ham), Parmesan, cheese and surrounding countryside. With a population of 198,986 inhabitants as of 2025, ...
, where he studied drawing and painting with
Clemente Ruta Clemente Ruta (9 May 1668 – 11 November 1767) was an Italian painter of the late-Baroque period. Biography Born at Parma, he first trained with a painter by the name of Ilario Spolverini, then later in Bologna with Carlo Cignani. He mo ...
. Subsequently he trained with the painter
Antonio Balestra Antonio Balestra (12 August 1666 – 21 April 1740) was an Italian painter of the Rococo period. Biography Born in Verona, he first apprenticed there with Giovanni Zeffio. By 1690 he moved to Venice, where he worked for three years under Anto ...
in Verona. In 1728 he was admitted to the Accademia dei Filotimi in Verona, and from this time onwards he held several important appointments on the city council. After a trip to Rome in 1729, he began to show a preference for architecture, which he had studied as an amateur, probably under the influence of
Francesco Scipione Maffei Francesco Scipione Maffei (; 1 June 1675 – 11 February 1755) was an Italian writer and art critic, author of many articles and plays. An antiquarian with a humanist education whose publications on Etruscan antiquities stand as incunables of ...
. In 1731 he began to make drawings from the buildings of
Michele Sanmicheli Michele Sanmicheli, sometimes also transcribed as Sammicheli, Sanmichele or Sammichele (Verona, 1484There is no certainty about the date of his birth. Vasari reports 1484, while architectural historian Giulio Sancassani, through a study of his fat ...
, which later formed the basis of a treatise (1735) on the latter’s life and his use of the
Classical orders An order in architecture is a certain assemblage of parts subject to uniform established proportions, regulated by the office that each part has to perform. Coming down to the present from Ancient Greece, Ancient Greek and Ancient Roman civiliz ...
in comparison with those of
Vitruvius Vitruvius ( ; ; –70 BC – after ) was a Roman architect and engineer during the 1st century BC, known for his multi-volume work titled . As the only treatise on architecture to survive from antiquity, it has been regarded since the Renaissan ...
, Alberti,
Palladio Andrea Palladio ( , ; ; 30 November 1508 – 19 August 1580) was an Italian Renaissance architect active in the Venetian Republic. Palladio, influenced by Roman and Greek architecture, primarily Vitruvius, is widely considered to be one ...
,
Scamozzi Vincenzo Scamozzi (2 September 1548 – 7 August 1616) was an Italian architect and a writer on architecture, active mainly in Vicenza and Republic of Venice area in the second half of the 16th century. He was perhaps the most important figure t ...
,
Serlio Sebastiano Serlio (6 September 1475 – c. 1554) was an Italian Mannerist architect, who was part of the Italian team building the Palace of Fontainebleau. Serlio helped canonize the classical orders of architecture in his influential treatise ...
and
Vignola Vignola (; Emilian language#Dialects, Modenese: ; Bolognese dialect, Bolognese: ) is a city and ''comune'' in the province of Modena (Emilia-Romagna), Italy. Its economy is based on agriculture, especially fruit farming, but there are also mecha ...
. The treatise’s
preface __NOTOC__ A preface () or proem () is an introduction to a book or other literature, literary work written by the work's author. An introductory essay written by a different person is a ''foreword'' and precedes an author's preface. The preface o ...
emphasizes the need for a strictly Classical language and vehemently condemns the misuses and degeneration of the ‘modern’ style of architecture after Borromini.


Mature work

Meanwhile, Pompei was testing his own ideas in a simply styled reconstruction (1731–7) of the family villa at
Illasi Illasi is a ''comune'' (municipality) in the Province of Verona in the Italian region Veneto, about west of Venice and about east of Verona. As of 31 December 2004, it had a population of 5,112 and an area of .All demographics and other statistic ...
, near Verona, decorated with his own frescoes and oil paintings. During this period he was also commissioned by Maffei to design the fluted Doric Loggia (1734–46) for the courtyard of the Museo Lapidario, Verona. In 1739, in addition to visiting Rome with Adriano Cristofali, who later became an architect, Pompei became interested in a text that was useful in the continued struggle against the
Baroque The Baroque ( , , ) is a Western Style (visual arts), style of Baroque architecture, architecture, Baroque music, music, Baroque dance, dance, Baroque painting, painting, Baroque sculpture, sculpture, poetry, and other arts that flourished from ...
: the manuscript treatise (1621) of Teofilo Gallaccini, ''Sopra gli errori degli architetti'', the publication of which was later promoted in Venice by Joseph Smith. This was followed by a number of other projects in and around Verona: designs for the Villa Giuliari (1739–43) at Settimo di Gallese with a Tuscan portico and Tuscan colonnades flanking the main block; for the restructuring and restoration of the garden façade of the Palazzo Spolverini (1740) in Verona; and for the Palazzo Pindemonte (1742) at
Vo' Vo' (or Vo' Euganeo; sometimes incorrectly spelled Vò or Vò Euganeo) is a ''comune'' (municipality) in the Province of Padua in the Italy, Italian Veneto region, located about west of Venice and about southwest of Padua, in the western end of t ...
. In these, emphasis was again placed on the strict and correct usage of the basic classical vocabulary. In Pompei’s most important work, the Dogana (1744–63) of San Fermo, Verona, he developed the Tuscan Loggia theme. There the Classical vocabulary assumed ideological overtones by re-evoking the importance of Verona in Roman times and by expressing the magnificence, pride and autonomy of the city’s aristocracy. Pompei was also responsible for several religious buildings: the churches of San Giacomo Maggiore ( 1756) and San Paolo in Campo Marzo (1763) in Verona and the oratory of the Blessed Virgin at Sanguinetto. In addition to providing plans for a number of smaller works and numerous restoration projects for villas and houses, he was also involved in
hydraulic engineering Hydraulic engineering as a sub-discipline of civil engineering is concerned with the flow and conveyance of fluids, principally water and sewage. One feature of these systems is the extensive use of gravity as the motive force to cause the move ...
projects, in particular for reclaiming the Valli Grandi Veronesi (1771). He was also a founder-member of the Accademia di Pittura (1764) and of the Accademia di Agricoltura (1768), both in Verona.


Writings

* ''Li cinque ordini dell’architettura civile di M. Sanmicheli'' (Verona, 1735).


References

*
''Cinque Ordine'' in Googlebooks

Li cinque ordini dell' architettura civile di Michel Sanmicheli : rilevati dalle sue fabriche, e descritti e publicati con quelli di Vitruvio, Alberti, Palladio, Scamozzi, Serlio, e Vignola
- 2010 facsimile digital edition by the Internet Archive, digitized with funds from Research Library, Getty Research Institute. {{DEFAULTSORT:Pompei, Alessandro 1705 births 1772 deaths 18th-century Italian architects Architects from Verona Italian architecture writers Italian male non-fiction writers