Longhi family

Italian architectural family
Also known as: Longo family, Lunghi family
Longhi also spelled:
Lunghi or Longo

Longhi family, a family of three generations of Italian architects who were originally from Viggiu, near Milan, but worked in Rome. Martino Longhi the Elder (died 1591) was a Mannerist architect who was commissioned by Pope Sixtus V (1585–90) to build the church of San Girolamo degli Schiavoni (1588–90) and continued work on the Chiesa Nuova (Santa Maria in Vallicella, Rome; 1599–1605 and on), which had been started by Matteo di Città di Castello.

His son, Onorio Longhi (1569–1619), began his major work, San Carlo al Corso, Rome, one of the largest churches in that city, in January 1612; and when he died in 1619, his son, Martino Longhi the Younger (1602–57), continued the work. Onorio Longhi also designed the large oval chapel in San Giovanni in Laterano, Rome.

Martino Longhi the Younger worked on San Carlo al Corso (1612–79) until he returned to Milan in 1656, but his unique work was the facade of Santi Vincenzo ed Anastasio in the Piazza di Trevi (1646–50). He also started the church of Santo Antonio de’Portoghesi in 1638 but left it unfinished when he returned to Milan. The staircase (c. 1640) in Bartolommeo Ammannati’s Palazzo Caetani (now Ruspoli) is another of his important Roman works. Martino signaled the arrival of the Baroque style in Rome, especially in his vigorous and layered church façades.

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Baroque architecture, architectural style originating in late 16th-century Italy and lasting in some regions, notably Germany and colonial South America, until the 18th century. It had its origins in the Counter-Reformation, when the Catholic Church launched an overtly emotional and sensory appeal to the faithful through art and architecture. Complex architectural plan shapes, often based on the oval, and the dynamic opposition and interpenetration of spaces were favoured to heighten the feeling of motion and sensuality. Other characteristic qualities include grandeur, drama and contrast (especially in lighting), curvaceousness, and an often dizzying array of rich surface treatments, twisting elements, and gilded statuary. Architects unabashedly applied bright colours and illusory, vividly painted ceilings. Outstanding practitioners in Italy included Gian Lorenzo Bernini, Carlo Maderno, Francesco Borromini, and Guarino Guarini. Classical elements subdued Baroque architecture in France. In central Europe, the Baroque arrived late but flourished in the works of such architects as the Austrian Johann Bernhard Fischer von Erlach. Its impact in Britain can be seen in the works of Christopher Wren. The late Baroque style is often referred to as Rococo or, in Spain and Spanish America, as Churrigueresque.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica This article was most recently revised and updated by Adam Augustyn.
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