
a book
Brunelleschi's Dome
Ross King · 2001 · 262 pages
By all accounts, Filippo Brunelleschi, goldsmith and clockmaker, was an unkempt, cantankerous, and suspicious man-even by the generous standards according to which artists were judged in fifteenth-century Florence. He also designed and erected a dome over the cathedral of Santa Maria del Fiore-a feat of architectural daring that we continue to marvel at today-thus securing himself a place among the most formidable geniuses of the Renaissance. At first denounced as a madman, Brunelleschi literally reinvented the field of architecture amid plagues, wars, and political feuds to raise seventy million pounds of metal, wood, and marble hundreds of feet in the air.
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Raychelle Burks
“Brunelleschi's Dome by Ross King Zero by @cgseife Examining Tuskegee by Susan Reverb The Physics of the Buffyverse by @JenLucPiquant”↗