My Cart

loader
Loading...

Sinan

Architect of Süleyman the Magnificent and the Ottoman Golden Age


  • Thames & Hudson
  • by By John Freely and Augusto Romano Burelli. Photography by Ara Güler
  • 9780500343111 | E | HB
Sinan was the greatest architect of the Ottoman Golden Age in the 16th century. His style marks the apogee of Turkish art. Sinan designed hundreds of buildings: mosques, palaces, tombs, mausolea, hospitals, schools, caravanserai, bridges, aqueducts and baths. Opulent colour photographs, many taken specially by Ara Güler for this publication, pay tribute to the extraordinary space and light of Sinan''s buildings.

€40,80
available
Quantity
More Information
Publisher Thames & Hudson
ISBN 9780500343111
Author(s) By John Freely and Augusto Romano Burelli. Photography by Ara Güler
Publication date September 2015
Edition Hardback
Dimensions 326 x 240 mm
Pages 144
Language(s) Eng. ed.
Description
Sinan was the greatest architect of the Ottoman Golden Age in the 16th century. While Michelangelo was working on St. Peter''s, Sinan completed the greatest of Turkish mosques, the Süleymaniye and the Selimiye. His style marks the apogee of Turkish art. Sinan designed hundreds of buildings: mosques, palaces, tombs, mausolea, hospitals, schools, caravanserai, bridges, aqueducts and baths. As he himself said, ''with time each edifice became - with the help of Allah and thanks to the generosity and benevolence of the State - the very image of the world in the lands ruled by the Ottoman dynasty.'' In his greatest works he adapted Byzantine and Islamic styles to produce something quite new: a centralized organization of absolute space unhindered by pillars or columns and covered by a soaring dome. An architect of genius in a dynamic new empire expanding into both Asia and Europe, he was a true man of the Renaissance. Opulent colour photographs, many taken specially by Ara Güler for this publication, pay tribute to the extraordinary space and light of Sinan''s buildings. Texts by the most important specialists in this field complement the handsome visual material and offer new interpretations of Sinan''s art. The result is a magnificent testament to the achievement of a man who stamped his imprint on an entire culture.