Guarino Guarini
Guarino Guarini | |
|---|---|
Guarino Guarini | |
| Born | 17 January 1624 |
| Died | 6 March 1683 (aged 59) |
| Nationality | Italian |
| Known for | |
| Parent(s) | Raimondo Guarini and Eugenia Guarini (née Marescotti) |
| Scientific career | |
| Fields | Architecture, mathematics, astronomy and physics |
| Ecclesiastical career | |
| Religion | Christianity |
| Church | Catholic Church |
| Ordained | January 17, 1648 |
Camillo Guarino Guarini (17 January 1624 – 6 March 1683) was an Italian architect of the Piedmontese Baroque, active in Turin as well as Sicily, France and Portugal. He was a Theatine priest, mathematician, and writer. His work represents the ultimate achievement of Italian Baroque structural engineering, creating in stone what could be attempted today in reinforced concrete. Together with Francesco Borromini, Guarini is the most renowned exponent of the anti-classical, anti-Vitruvian trend that dominated Italian architecture after Michelangelo but increasingly lost ground from the late 17th century. His subtly designed buildings, crowned with daring and complex domes, were ignored in Italy outside Piedmont, but illustrations published in 1686 and again in Guarini’s treatise Architettura civile (1737) proved a fruitful source of inspiration in the development of south German and Austrian late Baroque and Rococo architecture.