(1881–1960)
Italian architect, the son of Pio Piacentini (1846–1928), who was one of the leading architects in Rome in the first fifty years after Italian Unification (1861–71). Pio's works included the Palazzo delle Esposizioni (1880–2), Palazzo Sforza Cesarini (1886–8), and the Ministero di Grazia e Giustizia (1913–20), all in Rome, and all thoroughly competent eclectic buildings.
Marcello established his reputation with the Villa Allegri, Rome (1915–17), the Cinema ‘al Corso’, Rome (1915–17), the Palace of Justice, Messina (1912–28), and the centre of the Garden City Garbatella, Rome (1920). His designs of that time were academically sound and eclectically based. He became Professor of Architecture at Rome in 1920, and, in 1921, with Gustavo Giovannoni (1873–1947), founded the journal L'Architettura of which he was Chief Editor (1922–43) and was influential in promoting the work of younger architects, including those associated with Rationalism. When Benito Mussolini (1883–1945) came to power (1922), Piacentini became the leading protagonist of a stripped Neo-Classicism that was to be virtually the style of State Architecture under Fascism. In fact, he rose to such a position of influence that he has been called ‘Mussolini's Albert Speer’. He was no mean architect, as his Hotel Ambasciatori, Rome (1926–7), shows in its powerful
Bibliography
- Accasto et al. (1971)
- Etlin (1991)
- Gavin Stamp
- Lupano (1991)
- Meeks (1966)
- Patetta (1972)
- Piacentini (1930)
- A. Pica (1936)
- M. Pisani (ed.) (1996)
- Placzek (ed.) (1982)
- Portoghesi (1968)
- A. Rose (1995)
- Scarrocchia (1999)
- Seta (1978)
- Jane Turner (1996)
- Zevi (1973)
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)




