
Assuming responsibility for the restoration of the Basilica of
S. Andrea in Mantua, I sought to discover how much of the project
conceived by Alberti is discernible today. The intimate
relationships between number and architecture have been
interpreted in many different ways. One school envisions Alberti
as champion of the tranquil humanism of Cicero and creator of
universal harmonies, emphasizing musical relationships. Another
school proposes an interpretative model based on the use of
geometric systems of proportions. Whatever the point of view,
Alberti's design method resulted in the perfect fit of the parts,
which will concatenate only if expressed in a certain way.
My analysis of San Sebastiano in Mantua illustrates such a
concatenating system. A sixteenth century drawing offers a
fundamental key for the interpretation. All values of the
principle dimensions of the building may be encompassed in a
system of a few mathematical relationships. The internal
measurements in braccia of the central square, the arms of the
cross, and the portico, form the following three numerical
progressions:
| (a) | 34,(34), | 56-2/3 |
| (b) | 12, 20, | 33-1/3 |
| (c) | 10, | 16-2/3 |
| (d) | 4-4/5, 8, | 13-1/3 |
These facts constitute a solid base for the study of the Albertian design method: the dimensions of the architectural elements are determined by finite ratios; the dimensions are interrelated by mathematical (but not musical) progressions; the measurements create numerically proportionate triads, which are themselves proportionately interrelated. Perfect order, harmony, in which number links the visible to the invisible: mathematical order is not only the order of the divine, but also the basis for any order that can be achieved in reality.
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