(1772–1800)
Son of David Gilly, he learned practice and theory with his father in Stettin (now Szczecin), and in 1788 settled in Berlin. He developed his skills while also acting as Inspector in the Royal Buildings Department aged only 16, where he worked under Erdmannsdorff and Langhans. His own designs began to experiment with stereometrically pure forms and primitivist, elemental architecture, while his studies (1794) of the medieval Marienburg (now Malbork, Poland) fortress in East Prussia led to the beginnings of a conservation programme for that Sublime building as well as to a growing appreciation of the Backsteingotik of North Germany.
In 1796 the Academy of Fine Arts, Berlin, announced a competition for a monument to King Frederick the Great (reigned 1740–86), and in 1797 Gilly's design, set in a re-ordered Leipzigerplatz, and incorporating a powerful monumental gate, sarcophagi-lids,
Bibliography
- Bothe & Reelfs (eds.) (1994)
- F. Gilly (1994)
- F. Gilly & Frick (1965)
- Hederer (1976a)
- Herrmann (1977)
- Horn-Oncken (1981)
- E. Kaufmann (1952)
- Middleton & Watkin (1987)
- Oncken (1935)
- Simson (1976)
- Watkin & Mellinghoff (1987)
The full bibliography for this book is available to download as a pdf file.
Download the bibliography for A Dictionary of Architecture and Landscape Architecture (PDF: 1.2MB)




