Antoni Gaudi's Architectural Analysis

Andre Gennie

16 September 2024

Antoni Gaudi's architectural narrative blends practical and poetic elements, creating three-dimensional texts that intertwine a constructive narrative with textural, chromatic, and decorative inferences.

Park Güell's architectural signs, inspired by Catalan landscape and Art Nouveau styles, incorporate organic motifs and ornamentation to create a symbolic meaning.

Gaudi's architecture uses colour to disrupt language automatism, exemplified in Park Güell's trends, a visual patterning of broken ceramics, repetition, rhythm, texture, and form.

Gaudi and Catalan architects embraced modernist principles, incorporating organic forms and materials and contributing to the evolution of Art Nouveau through innovative structural systems.

Colonia Güell, designed by Gaudi, embodies his focus on economy and efficiency, blending poetic expression with new structural forms to create a mysterious, primitive atmosphere.

Casa Batlló, a Gaudi design, is analyzed as a symbolic structure, incorporating elements like the Mediterranean Sea, carnival, and Saint George's legend to convey its multivalent meaning.

Gaudí's architectural genius is characterized by meticulous details, spiral towers, and organic forms, evoking ecstasy and divine communion and incorporating metonymy in Sagrada Familia.

Gaudí's architecture offers an immersive, poetic experience, stimulating the senses and evoking powerful emotions, as seen in Casa Milà's unsettling rooftop shapes.

Gaudi’s unique style, rooted in his Catalan origins, embraces both the utilitarian language of construction and the creative, poetic language of symbolism.