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Wyświetlanie 1-4 z 4
Tytuł:
Architektura kościoła i kolegium jezuitów w Witebsku
The Architecture of the Jesuit Church and College in Witebsk
Autorzy:
Boberski, Wojciech
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/1954596.pdf
Data publikacji:
2002
Wydawca:
Katolicki Uniwersytet Lubelski Jana Pawła II. Towarzystwo Naukowe KUL
Opis:
In the lands of White Ruthenia, beyond the rivers Dźwina and Berezyna, Jesuit colleges marked the routes of the victorious campaigns against Moscow; in their course the areas lost by the Grand Duchy of Lithuania in the 16th century were regained. The invincible commander and clever diplomat, the Smolensk voivode, Alexander Korwin Gosiewski was the founder of the college in Witebsk (1637). A perspective plan of Witebsk made in 1664, when the town was occupied by Moscow troops, shows the order’s first wooden buildings with the one-spire St Joseph church (built in 1643-1644). After the return of the monks new wooden buildings were raised (the chemist’s, school, boarding house). The Witebsk chamberlain Adam Franciszek Kisiel turned the church into a family mausoleum and an animated centre of the cult of Blessed Jozafat Kuncewicz, the Uniate archbishop murdered in Witebsk in 1623. All the wooden buildings were burnt by Russian troops in 1708. In 1691 foundations were built for two wings of a stone college. The eastern one, with a vast refectory, was completed (1713-1714) by an architect brought from the Inflants. The northern one, along the River Witba, was built in the years 1737-1759. In 1713 approval was received from Rome for delineation of the church. Architects brought from Vilnius managed its construction (1714-1731). In decorating the interior the painter Jakub Bretzer SJ took part. It was furnished with 11 wooden altars. The church, whose main founder was the Witebsk voivode Marcjan Ogiń ski, in the 18th century played the role of the family mausoleum. The two-spire basilica with a transept and a dome followed in its shape the Jesuits’ most magnificent Lithuanian churches – in Vilnius (St Casimirus church), and especially in Grodno. Composition of the facade was similar to the elevations of the missionaries’ churches in Vilnius and Franciscans in Pinsk. The bipartite elevations of the transept – characteristic of most Jesuit churches in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania – directly followed the architecture of the Jesuit church in Nieśwież, where they may have been an echo of the Crusaders Facade of the Ressurection Basilica in Jerusalem. Compared to the oversimplified, and sometimes indeed primitive divisions and details characteristic of the architecture of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania in the first thirty years of the 18th century the careful articulation of the Witebsk church presented a suprisingly high standard that speaks well not only for the classical (Italian) education of the author of the design but also about the masons’ qualifications. This inclines one to assume that a design prepared earlier, perhaps as soon as 1684, to which year the later inspector dated (unjustly) the beginning of construction, was used. Works conducted in the years 1761-1767 introduced late baroque elements to the architecture of the college, that were characteristic of its ‘Vilnius’ variety. Among others, the elegant western frontage of the college with the towered structure of the gate was built then; as also was the new picturesque dome of the church. In autumn 1760, probably for designing the buildings, the Jesuits paid Johann Christoph Glaubitz (died in 1767), although a Mr Mackiewicz was called “the architect of the church dome and the spire” (1765-1767). At the same time modernization of the decoration was under way: in 1767 the altar painting of the Immaculate Conception by Szymon Czechowicz was bought; the painter was employed in the Polock college at that time. In the years 1794-1796 and 1800-1801 the architecture professor, Father Gaetano Angiolini SJ having brought from Verona pictures painted by Saverino della Rosa (1743-1821) decorated the church with confessionals and altars. In 1799-1808, perhaps according to his design, a new school building was constructed in the style of ascetic classicism that was called ‘the house with the dome’. After the Jesuits were expelled from Russia (1820) the buildings belonged to the Basilians (1822-1839). In 1841 they were turned over to the authorities of the Orthodox Archdiocese. The church’s adaptation into St Nicolaus’ Orthodox church that was conducted by the architect Bettini (1842-1843) had the character of a superficial classicisation. Eclectic and pseudo- Ruthenian motifs were only brought by the thorough restructuring (1868-1872) according to Mikołaj Czagin’s design. The belfry over the gate was pulled down then. The interior of the Orthodox church was decorated by neo-Byzantine frescos (painted by Winogradow) and a wooden iconostasis (Paweł Warfołomiew from Moscow, the painter Rozanow). In 1893 a domed vestibule was introduced that preceeded the facade. The church, closed in 1929, was blown up on 12 April 1957. The Jesuit college and church in Witebsk had an important place in the panorama of baroque architecture of the north-east borderland of the Polish Republic. After the Middle Ages scarce stone Orthodox churches and ruins of princes’ castles remained. In the 17th century in the vast areas beyond the rivers Dźwina and Berezyna seven stone Orthodox churches, one Uniate, only one (!) Catholic and one Jewish synagogue were built. Two major lordly castles, a town-hall, an armoury, a few town gates and tenement houses were built. A decided majority of those stone buildings were located in Mohylew. The Witebsk fabrica ecclesiae preceeded the enlivening of building activity in other centres of White Ruthenia, as it happened only in the second third of the 18th century, due to the Societatis investments: in Mścisław (1730-48), Polock (1733-45, rebuilt 1762-65), Faszczówka (1738-57) and Orsza (1741-57). The churches in the three latter places (pulled down about 1960) repeated – with slight modifications – the space solution of St Joseph church in Witebsk, and in Faszczówka also the articulation of the outside followed it.
Źródło:
Roczniki Humanistyczne; 2002, 50, 4 Special Issue; 323-366
0035-7707
Pojawia się w:
Roczniki Humanistyczne
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Architekt Abraham Würtzner (?). Przyczynek do dziejów wileńskiego baroku
Architect Abraham (Würtzner?). Contribution to the History of Vilnius Baroque
Autorzy:
Boberski, Wojciech
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/24567385.pdf
Data publikacji:
2021
Wydawca:
Polska Akademia Nauk. Instytut Sztuki PAN
Tematy:
Wilno
architektura
późny barok
wileńska odmiana architektury
Johann Christoph Glaubitz
Abraham Würtzner
Abraham Genu
dzwonnica kościoła Wszystkich Świętych w Wilnie
kościół karmelitów w Głębokiem
kościół pijarów w Łużkach
Vilnius
architecture
late Baroque
Vilnius architecture variant
bell tower of the Church of All Saints in Vilnius
Carmelite Church in Głębokie
Piarist Church at Łużki
Opis:
Artykuł jest próbą nakreślenia sylwetki architekta Abrahama, noszącego zapewne nazwisko Würtzner (przed 1700–1758).  Źródła archiwalne zaświadczają, że pochodził z „Krajów Cesarskich”. Prawdopodobnie miał syna Ignacego, również architekta, a także krewnego, złotnika Johanna, który przybył do Wilna z Lidzbarka Warmińskiego. Potwierdzają one ponadto udział architekta Abrahama w powstaniu większości dzieł krzewiących idee Borrominiego i Guariniego, a wiązanych ostatnio z Glaubitzem lub z „anonimowym włoskim architektem”. Był on zatem autorem niezwykłych karmelickich budowli w Wilnie i w Głębokiem, wybudował wieże kościoła dominikanów na Łukiszkach, a także oryginalny kościół kolegium pijarów w Łużkach nieopodal Głębokiego (1742). Budował również w Mińsku oraz w Nowogródku. Jakkolwiek nie ma bezpośrednich odniesień do konkretnych realizacji, indywidualny styl architekta Abrahama pozwala rozważać jego autorstwo wobec szeregu budowli zarówno na terenie Wilna (fasady kościoła wizytek i kościoła franciszkanów, kościół augustianów), Mińska (fasady kościoła dominikanów i kościoła bernardynów, wieża przed kolegium jezuitów) i Nowogródka (cerkiew zamkowa?), jak i na prowincji, np. kościół farny w Iwieńcu czy pałac Radziwiłłów w Zdzięciole (1729–1731?). 
As much as it is widely acknowledged that the Vilnius variant of late-Baroque architecture did not result as a slow development of the local tradition, but appeared suddenly after 1730, evolving stylistically for the next 40 years, two opposite views regarding its genesis have been clashing for almost a century. The first, and the still domineering one, represented in the publications by Stanisław Lorentz and Vladas Drema, saw the most important, possibly the only initiator and creator of the ‘school’ in Johann Christoph Glaubitz. Both scholars attributed to that unquestionably appreciated architect an impressive output containing over 60 pieces, including all the most outstanding works created both within his confirmed activity (1738–1767), before it, and even after his death. The sources of Glaubitz’s art have been sought after within the circle of architecture of the Imperial Countries, Bohemia, Austria, yet first and foremost in Silesia from where he most likely came. It was Marian Morelowski who promoted a contradictory view: he tried to diversify ‘Glaubitz’s’ hegemony, belittling the role of the artists with German-sounding names, and exposing that of the supposed Italians, Flemish, and native artists instead. When pointing to the Italian inspirations of Vilnius architecture of late Baroque, he emphasized the direct impact of the models by Borromini, Guarini, and Juvarra, as well as Pozzo and the Bibbienas working for the Habsburgs. Under the influence of Piotr Bohdziewicz’s suggestions at the time he seriously considered the possibility that the Vilnius style revolution may have been initiated by the architect Francesco Placidi active in Lesser Poland and his supposed disciples. The major premise for that attribution was the erroneous view which made Bohdziewicz attribute the unusual church in Kobyłka near Warsaw (1740–1746) to Placidi;  in its forms essential analogies with the early works of late-Baroque Vilnius ‘school’ of architecture were spotted. The Kobyłka Church also served as the key to the explanation of the genesis of the ‘school’ by Mariusz Karpowicz: he claimed that the groundworks for late Baroque in Vilnius were laid by Guido Antonio Longhi, later confirmed to have been the author of the church near Warsaw, while the work which played the role of the model was his design of the Uniate Cathedral of St Sophia in Połock from 1738, which actually anticipated the known activity of the architect. Since Longhi left the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth in 1749, Karpowicz attributed the most illustrious works of the Vilnius Baroque created after the mid-18th century to his supposed disciple Antonio Paracca of Castello, an architect affiliated to the Platers’ court in Krasław in Livonia. And thus, similarly as in the case of Glaubitz, a coherent and suggestive image was created, although obviously outlined only intuitively. Despite the fact that preliminary researches into archival materials conducted by Polish and Lithuanian scholars have allowed to bring forth profiles of other architects (Joannes Valentinus Tobias de Dyderszteyn, Józef Fontana ‘of Witebsk’, Johann Wilhelm Frezer, Tomasz Żebrowski SJ), while Jerzy Kowalczyk thoroughly  studied Guarini’s roots of late-Baroque architecture of Vilnius, the question of its initiators remains unclear. Still before the outbreak of WW II, Piotr Bohdziewicz and Marian Morelowski had distinguished three buildings whose dynamically undulating cornices  and protruding elevations were supposed to herald stylistic changes which occurred in Vilnius following the city’s fire in June 1737. The first was the Church of the Visitation Nuns whose construction launched in 1720 lasted for at least 20 years; the second was the belfry of the Calced Carmelites of All Saints dated from 1733–1743; the third being the Głębokie church of the Discalced Carmelites located 250 km south of Vilnius whose late-Baroque extension was to be completed with its consecration in 1735. When searching for the authors of those outstanding genuine pieces of architecture, focus was put on above-mentioned Francesco Placidi and his ‘school’, while in the case of the Głębokie towers the hypothesis was accepted that even a direct participation of his master may have taken place, namely that of Gaetano Chiaveri, designer of the Dresden Hofkirche. Having moved the dating, Stanisław Lorentz finally included all the three buildings in Glaubitz’s output, while Jerzy Kowalczyk created the concept of an ‘anonymous Italian architect’ (gently suggesting that Józef Fontatna, active within the Grand Duchy of Lithuania could have played that role), and extended the above-mentioned group by incorporating the undulating façade of the Dominican Church into it. The view on the activity of the anonymous Italian who ‘shyly’ promoted the ideas of Borromini and Guarini in Vilnius was shared by Mariusz Karpowicz, although he considered the façade of the Church of the Visitation Nuns to have been the work of Guido Antonio Longhi. Amidst that vivid academic debate, although not grounded in the sources, an exceptional view had been voiced still before WW II. Namely, owing to the similarity of ornamental motifs, Piotr Bohdziewicz pointed to the two towers of the façade of the Dominican Church of SS James and Philip at the Vilnius Łukiszki, concluding, however, that their author was less courageous in his artistic imagination than the authors of the three structures mentioned earlier. When Euzebiusz Łopaciński found among the invoices of the Łukiszki Dominicans the name of the architect Abraham who raised the towers of the Church of SS James and Philip in 1743–1746, Marian Morelowski, although not avoiding a question mark, attributed to this newly-discovered ‘representative of Placidi’s school’ all the works from the above-mentioned group (and several new ones as well), but also for some incomprehensible reasons (since not grounded in the mentioned invoices) he named him ‘Genu’, suggesting his descent from the Republic of Venice. The latter was, by no means, a fictitious personage, since at least as of 1727 until his death in 1769, there lived in Vilnius Abraham Antoni Genu (Żena, Genou). Finally, he turned out to have been a Frenchman. He participated in numerous celebrations of the Brotherhood of St Martin, which grouped German artists, craftsmen, and merchants living in Vilnius around the Church of the Jesuit Novitiate.  An affluent individual, he was buried in the Carmelite Church: his two tenement houses were located nearby. However, the only unknown is his profession. There are no such doubts with regard to another member of that Brotherhood Abraham Würtzner (Werthner), present in it from 1728, who died 30 years later. It is known that in 1741, an architect and a Vilnius citizen as well, he designed (unpreserved) brick stucco altars and the music gallery in the Corpus Christi Chapel in the Jesuit Church of St John. For the moment it is the only architect’s name recorded in the course of creating an impressive set of stucco altars inside the Church: a breakthrough artistic project in the art of the Vilnius of the day. Although Glaubitz, employed to renovate the Chapel of St Barbara (of the goldsmiths) and of the Annunciation of Our Lady had appeared there earlier (1739–1740), he was merely a ‘magister murarius’, working under architect’s supervision, and a stuccoist. The paper attempts at outlining the profile of the architect Abraham, possibly bearing the name of Würtzner (before 1700–1758).  Archival sources testify that he came from ‘Imperial Countries’. He most likely had a son Ignacy, an architect as well, but also a relative Johann, a goldsmith, who came to Vilnius from Lidzbark Warmiński  and died in 1757. Furthermore, the sources confirm the participation of the architect Abraham in the creation of the majority of works promoting the ideas of Borromini and Guarini,  previously attributed to Placidi, Glaubitz, or the ‘anonymous Italian architect’. Abraham thus authored  the unusual belfry of the Calced Carmelite Church of all Saints in Vilnius, the extension of the Carmelite Church in Głębokie; he raised the towers of the Łukiszki Dominican Church, and the genuine church of the Piarist College at Łużki near Głębokie (1742). Furthermore, he raised some edifices in Minsk and Nowogródek. Despite any direct references lacking with respect to definite projects, his genuine style allows to attribute to him the authorship of a number  of structures in Vilnius itself (façades of the Churches of the Visitation Nuns, the Franciscans, and of the Augustines), in Minsk (façades of the Dominican and Bernardine Churches, the tower in front of the Jesuit College), and Nowogródek (Uniate Church at the Castle?), as well as in the provinces, e.g., the Iwieniec Parish Church or the Zdzięcioł Palace of the Radziwiłłs (1729–1731?).  The assumed chronology of several of the above architectural works requires verification and specification, however, the collected material justifies the conclusion that next to Johann Christoph Glaubitz it was Abraham (Würtzner?) who played a leading role in the early period of the formation of ‘Vilnius Baroque’ in which the caesura was formed by the next fire in the city in 1749, and the inflow of new artists following it.
Źródło:
Biuletyn Historii Sztuki; 2021, 83, 3; 645-682
0006-3967
2719-4612
Pojawia się w:
Biuletyn Historii Sztuki
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Jerzy Kowalczyk (1930-2018)
Autorzy:
Mossakowski, Stanisław
Boberski, Wojciech
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/23352238.pdf
Data publikacji:
2022
Wydawca:
Polska Akademia Nauk. Instytut Sztuki PAN
Tematy:
Jerzy Kowalczyk
Opis:
Wspomnienie o prof. dr hab Jerzym Kowalczyku (1930-2018)
Memory of prof. Jerzy Kowalczyk (1930-2018)
Źródło:
Biuletyn Historii Sztuki; 2022, 84, 2; 411-428
0006-3967
2719-4612
Pojawia się w:
Biuletyn Historii Sztuki
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Monaster Świętej Trójcy w Markowie pod Witebskiem
The Holy Trinity Orthodox Monastery at Markowo near Witebsk
Autorzy:
Boberska, Marta
Boberski, Wojciech
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/24822868.pdf
Data publikacji:
2021
Wydawca:
Polska Akademia Nauk. Instytut Sztuki PAN
Tematy:
Markowo
Witebsk
Samuel Lew Ogiński
monaster
cerkiew Św. Trójcy w Markowie
architektura drewniana
ikonostas
malowidła barokowe
Witebsk (Vitebsk)
Orthodox monastery
Orthodox Church of the Holy Trinity at Markowo
wooden architecture
iconostasis
Baroque paintings
Opis:
Artykuł jest monograficznym opracowaniem monasteru Świętej Trójcy w Markowie pod Witebskiem. Przedstawia jego dzieje na tle konfliktów religijnych między wyznawcami prawosławia a unitami w XVII i XVIII w., szczególnie żywych w Witebsku, w którym pamięć o zabójstwie abp Jozafata Kuncewicza (1623) czyniła z restytucji prawosławia kwestię bardzo  drażliwą. Fundatorami i dobroczyńcami markowskiego monasteru w XVII w. była rodzina Ogińskich. Zgodnie ze wschodnią tradycją monastyczną, zespół budowli skupionych wokół dziedzińca tworzył niemal samowystarczalne „osobne miasto”. Składały się nań: dwie cerkwie: drewniana Świętej Trójcy (po 1685-1690) o bogatym wyposażeniu i murowana pw. Pokrowy [Opieki Najświętszej Marii Panny] (1754-1755) oraz zabudowania klasztorne. Do monasteru należały jeszcze dwie drewniane cerkwie stojące poza jego murami cmentarna św. Mikołaja i św. Praksedy (obie ok. 1730 r.).
A monograph study on the Orthodox Monastery of the Holy Trinity at Markowo near Witebsk (Vitebsk) is presented. It shows the Monastery’s history as seen against religious conflicts between the followers of the Orthodox and Uniate Churches in the 17th cand 18th centuries, the conflicts particularly vivid in Witebsk where the memory of the assassination of Archbishop Jozafat Kuncewicz (1623) made the restitution of the Orthodox Church a sensitive issue. The Ogiński family were the founders and benefactors of the Markowo Monastery in the 17th century. In harmony with the Eastern monastic tradition, the complex of buildings grouped around a courtyard created an almost self-sufficient ‘separate town’. It was composed of the following: two Orthodox churches: the wooden one of the Holy Trinity (after 1685-1690), richly furnished, and the brick one of the Intercession of the Theotokos (1754-1755), together with monastery buildings. Additionally, two wooden Orthodox churches belonged to the Monastery: the cemetery one of St Nicholas and of St Praxedes (both ca 1730).
Źródło:
Biuletyn Historii Sztuki; 2021, 83, 4; 947-988
0006-3967
2719-4612
Pojawia się w:
Biuletyn Historii Sztuki
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
    Wyświetlanie 1-4 z 4

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