BOOKS ON ARCHITECTURE
Author(s) |
Bullant, Jean |
Title |
Reigle generalle d’architecture... |
Imprint |
Paris, J. Marnef & G. Cavellat, 1568 |
Localisation |
Paris, Binha, Fol. Res 558 |
Subject |
Antiquities, Orders |
French
In 1568
Jean Bullant proposed a second edition of the Reigle. This
new version is rather different from the first. The author corrected
a few mistakes (the Vitruvian Doric presented in 1564 as the order of
the Theater of Marcellus becomes a "dorique selon la doctrine de
Vitruve"). Above all he enlarged his book by adding "cinq
autres ordres de colonnes", which in fact are variants of those
at the beginning of the volume, with more geometrical indications of
proportions, to folios C 4 (two Doric orders) E 1 (two Ionic orders)
G 1 (two Corinthian orders). Each of these representations is furthermore
specified by plates giving details for the Doric (ff. C 4v° and
D 1), the Ionic (ff. E 1v° and E 2) and Corinthian entablatures
(ff. G 1v° and G 2v°). The initial text, which did nothing more
than repeat Vitruvius and Alberti, was supplemented with annotations
on the plates (ff. C 3v° to D 1v°, E 1 to E 2v°, F 4v°
at the end). Finally Bullant announces the copperplates that are not
found in any of the copies of this edition, but only in the 1564 Reigle
at the Ensba and on this database. In the margin, were added
relevant measurements in feet, inches and lines to the architectural
plans of the main antique orders.
These last
additions, apparently very minor, are in fact very significant ones
from the point of view of Bullant’s method. Indeed, the measurements
do not always agree with the plates that they are supposed to supplement.
If for the detail of the entablature of the Theater of Marcellus, two
similar quarters of a circle, equal in radius to the base of the column,
indicate an identical height for the capital and the architrave (in
accordance with the Vitruvian text), it is stipulated in the margin
that the capital in one foot, five inches and six lines high, and that
the architrave measures one foot, five inches and eleven lines. Bullant
took the trouble to point out this minor difference, but he eliminated
it from the plate, in a way correcting the antique architect’s
"mistake" and giving a geometric purity to the theater’s
order that it never had. Several other "corrections" of this
sort appear in the so-called architectural plans of antique works, corrections
that moreover the author does not hide, "Au surplus Messieurs,
je vous supplie ne me vouloir imputer à presumption aucune, ceste
mienne entreprise, ny m’estimer si temeraire, que de vouloir corriger
les inventions & ouvrages antiques : car mon intention ne fust oncques
autre, que de faire congnoistre (tant qu’en moy est) les choses
qui sont bien ou mal entendues, desirant par ce mien labeur donner occasion
aux hommes studieux & mieux exercez en cest art, de nous esclaircir
de plus en plus en ceste noble discipline & reigle de Vitruve, nous
recueillir tant de belles fleurs, desquelles on void les champs fertilles
de ces bons aucteurs estre semez, faire venir en congnoissance de tous
une infinité d’autres inventions, qui serviront à
la posterité, & ne se point monstrer chiche des dons de grace
par eux liberallement receuz, tant de Dieu que de nature".
It is only
an apparent paradox if one thinks about the function of this treatise
and about pedagogical models as they appeared in the specialized treatises
at that time. In fact, Bullant’s priority is not to give an account
of architectural reality, but to play a pedagogical role ; he wrote, "au
proffit de tous ouvriers besongneux au compas & a l’esquierre",
as the title of the work reminds us. The flowers evoked in the text
are there to recall this to us: it’s no more than an anthology.
From this point of view, the treatise is supposed to provide its readers
with models likely to be reused in modern contexts, thus "good"
models, which emphasize the supposed regularity of the fine architecture
of the Ancients. Bullant says clearly that "qu’[il lui] a semblé
convenable de réduire à [son] pouvoir les ordres plus
loüez qui se voyent à Rome". We find the verb "réduire"
used frequently to speak of the transformation of authors from antiquity
into practical manuals : they are "réduits en lieux communs".
This reduction takes two forms. On the one hand, the number of vestiges
retained is very limited (seven examples), in the same way that from
antique literature only a few authors are presented : Cicero, Virgil
and Ovid. On the other hand, the attitude of the Moderns about correction
in the art of building demands that the models that need it be corrected.
From that point of view, Bullant’s Reigle is the perfect
equivalent of the collections of "morceaux choisis" for young
people, which provided them during the Renaissance with a revised and
improved antique culture, "moralisés" Virgils or Ovids
which could contribute much more than the originals to the education
and moral edification of the pupils. The unexpurgated version of the
Ars amandi wasn’t to be recommended to everyone.
Yves Pauwels (Centre d’études supérieures
de la Renaissance, Tours) – 2008
Critical bibliography
F.-C. James, Jean Bullant. Recherches sur l’architecture française
au XVIème siècle, thesis, École nationale
des Chartes, 1968 ; abstract in École nationale des Chartes,
Positions de thèses, 1968, pp. 101-109.
Y. Pauwels, "Les antiques romains dans les traités de Philibert
De L’Orme et Jean Bullant", Mélanges de l’École
française de Rome-Italie et Méditerranée,
106, 1994-2, pp. 531-547.
Y. Pauwels, "Leon Battista Alberti et les théoriciens français
du XVIe siècle : le traité de Jean Bullant", Albertiana,
2, 1999, pp. 101-114.
Y. Pauwels, L’architecture au temps de la Pléiade,
Paris, Monfort, 2002.
Y. Pauwels, "La fortune de la Reigle de Jean Bullant", Journal
de la Renaissance, 3, 2005, pp. 111-119.
Y. Pauwels, "Vitruvianisme et “réduction” architecturale
au XVIe siècle", H. Vérin & P. Dubourg-Glatigny (ed.), Réduire an Art. La technologie de la Renaissance aux Lumières, Paris, Éditions de la Maison des sciences de l'homme, 2008, pp. 97-114.
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