Italian Renaissance architect and theorist. He set out the principles of classical architecture, and covered their modification for Renaissance practice, in
De re aedificatoria/On Architecture, which he started in 1452 and worked on until his death (published in 1485; translated as
Ten Books on Architecture in 1955).
Alberti's designs for the churches of San Sebastiano, begun In 1460, and San Andrea (1470; both in Mantua) the only two extant buildings entirely of his design are bold in their use of classical language but to a certain extent anticipate
Mannerism. His treatises on painting (1436) and sculpture (
c. 1464) were the first to examine the theory as well as the technique of the subjects. He also wrote works on mathematics, ethics, religion, and grammar.
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