Picture of author.

Paolo Marton (1942–2016)

Author of Palladio: The Complete Buildings

14+ Works 296 Members 1 Review

About the Author

Image credit: Paolo Marton en 2e de couverture de son ouvrage "Vivre Venise" (Mengès, 1983)

Works by Paolo Marton

Palladio: The Complete Buildings (1999) — Photographer — 156 copies, 1 review
Venetian Palaces (1989) — Photographer — 72 copies
German Castles and Palaces (1999) — Photographer — 20 copies
Florence: The Golden Centuries (1996) — Photographer — 14 copies
Marca nobilissima: la provincia di Treviso (1994) — Photographer — 3 copies
Verona (1991) 3 copies
Canova - Scultore, pittore, architetto a Possagno (2003) — Photographer — 3 copies

Associated Works

Venetian Villas (1986) — Photographer — 240 copies
Andrea Palladio: The Architect in His Time (1994) — Photographer, some editions — 79 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1942-01-22
Date of death
2016-02-15
Gender
male
Occupations
Photographe
Bibliothécaire
Relationships
Marton, Bruno (Père)
Marton, Tolo (Frère)
Nationality
Italie
Birthplace
Trévise, Italie
Place of death
Trévise, Italie
Map Location
Italie

Members

Reviews

1 review
I wanted to find out more about the work of the architect who inspired those who designed and built much of Georgian and Regency Bath. This book seemed the perfect opportunity. There's much that is good about it: great photography, willingness to give over an entire double page spread to one picture when appropriate, nice maps showing the locations of all the buildings, large format, but...you knew there was going to be a but, right?

But the book is let down heavily by the text. There's an show more architectural glossary but it is cursory and needs to be much more comprehensive. Some of the definitions differ from others I've come across. The author clearly isn't a native English speaker and the proof-reading cannot have been done by one either: a few sentences are entirely unintelligible and typos are sprinkled through-out. I never worked out what the author meant by "plastic" - none of the ordinary definitions seem to fit. The style is weirdly elliptical. Whilst interesting, it's not pleasant reading. Finally, at the end, there's a five page essay on "Palladio's Legacy," except only the final three sentences were actually on topic, which is a real shame as it's an interesting topic and most of the essay was just recapitulation of previous material.

Despite these flaws, it served my purpose, giving me very clear ideas on what techniques and motifs of Bath architecture are taken from Palladio. I could have acheived the goal just by looking at the pictures, though.
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Statistics

Works
14
Also by
2
Members
296
Popularity
#79,167
Rating
3.9
Reviews
1
ISBNs
43
Languages
6

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