Inigo Jones

Architecture English 1573 – 1652 100 quotes

Introduced Palladian architecture to England with designs like the Queen's House, influencing British classical style.

Quotes by Inigo Jones

As man is the most perfect of all creatures, so is the perfect building the most perfect of all works of art.

Unpublished notes, possibly 'The Most Notable Antiquity of Great Britain'

Architecture is not merely a science, but an art, and that art the noblest of all.

Unpublished notes

The true end of architecture is to give delight.

Unpublished notes

All architecture should be solid, convenient, and beautiful.

A paraphrase of Vitruvius, frequently attributed to Jones's principles

The design of a building should be such that it may be understood by all, and admired by the judicious.

Unpublished notes

Beauty is nothing else but a just symmetry and proportion of parts.

Unpublished notes

The eye is the judge of beauty, and the mind of proportion.

Unpublished notes

To build well, one must first think well.

Unpublished notes

The greatest ornament of a building is its fitness for the use to which it is applied.

Unpublished notes

I have made it my business to study the best authors, and to observe the best buildings.

Unpublished notes

The true architect is not he who builds much, but he who builds well.

Unpublished notes

Proportion is the soul of architecture.

Unpublished notes

The art of building is the art of proportion.

Unpublished notes

Without proportion, there can be no beauty.

Unpublished notes

The rules of architecture are not arbitrary, but founded in nature.

Unpublished notes

A building should be like a well-composed piece of music, where every part contributes to the harmony of the whole.

Unpublished notes

The architect must be a man of universal knowledge.

Unpublished notes

To understand architecture, one must understand the human body.

Unpublished notes, reflecting Vitruvian principles

The orders of architecture are the alphabet of design.

Unpublished notes

Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication in building.

Unpublished notes