Study-unit HISTORY OF ARCHITECTURE 2
Course name | Building engineering and architecture |
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Study-unit Code | GP003197 |
Curriculum | Comune a tutti i curricula |
Lecturer | Francesca Funis |
Lecturers |
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Hours |
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CFU | 9 |
Course Regulation | Coorte 2023 |
Supplied | 2024/25 |
Supplied other course regulation | |
Learning activities | Base |
Area | Discipline storiche per l'architettura |
Sector | ICAR/18 |
Type of study-unit | Obbligatorio (Required) |
Type of learning activities | Attività formativa monodisciplinare |
Language of instruction | Italian |
Contents | The course will address the use of classical architecture as an architectural language in the History of Architecture. The course will cover major architectural and urban episodes placed in different periods, with the following periodization: architectural order and its components; Romanesque architecture; Gothic architecture; Renaissance architecture; Baroque architecture; Neoclassicism; Industrialization and Modernisms; Chicago School; Vienna Secession; Art Nouveau and Catalan Modernism. |
Reference texts | Handbooks: - Autori Vari, Lineamenti di storia dell'architettura, Armando Edizioni, 2019 (oppure Roma, Sovera Edizioni, 2018 o precedenti). - W. Curtis, L'architettura moderna dal 1900, Phaidon, 2006. During the course, the Professor will supply students with PDfs of articles, essays and texts on the topics addressed. This material will be available on Unistudium with access key. |
Educational objectives | The course provides cognitive support and the necessary critical tools for interpreting architecture from Romanesque period and the early twentieth century. Students must master the fundamental competences of history of architecture, namely periodization; nomenclature; founding elements; construction techniques; the building site; materials; compositional themes; architectural typologies; design and historical survey; representation of architecture; the commissioner's role and the relationship with the figurative arts; the project and its capacity to change the environment, the city and the territory over time. |
Prerequisites | Knowledge of the topics treated in the History of Architecture course 1. In addition, the student should possess basic historical and cultural knowledge related to the historical periods covered. |
Teaching methods | Ex-cathedra lectures, thematic and seminar insights, study visits. |
Other information | The history of architecture embraces a series of exemplars that effectively document its phenomenological, symbolic and social value. Visiting these exemplars is essential when taking this subject, since it enables students to study first-hand the physical features of the buildings and their spatial and material characteristics. Hence visiting the works under study in situ is recommended to gain a more complete knowledge of them. Florence: Baptistery; Santa Maria del Fiore, church, dome, bell tower; San Miniato al Monte; Palazzo Vecchio and Uffizi; Santa Croce, Pazzi Chapel; Santa Maria Novella (façade); Piazza della Santissima Annunziata; Palazzo Medici Riccardi; San Lorenzo, church, Old Sacristy, Laurentian Library, Medici Chapels; Palazzo (façade) and Rucellai Loggia; Santo Spirito, church and sacristy; Pitti Palace and Boboli Gardens. Rome: Tempietto of St. Peter in Montorio; Capitoline Square; St. Peter's, basilica, canopy, piazza; Fountain of the Four Rivers in Piazza Navona; Cornaro Chapel in Santa Maria della Vittoria; Scala Regia in the Vatican; Gallery of Palazzo Capodiferro-Spada; Church and convent of San Carlo alle Quattro Fontane; church of Sant'Agnese in Agone; Sant'Ivo alla Sapienza. |
Learning verification modality | Oral exam on the entire program, from Romanesque architecture to Modernisms (Art Nouveau, Catalan Modernism and the Vienna Secession). Each student (if she/he wants) can provide the necessary iconographic material on a pc, tablet or paper. To pass the final exam students must show that they have achieved the objectives of the course. In particular, they must possess an in-depth knowledge (including the chronology, commissioner, design process, distributive and structural characteristics, materials, spatial and formal aspects) of the buildings explained in the "Programma esteso". |
Extended program | Course content The course will address the use of classical architecture as an architectural language in the History of Architecture. The course will cover major architectural and urban episodes placed in different periods, with the following periodization: architectural order and its components; Romanesque architecture; Gothic architecture; Renaissance architecture; Baroque architecture; Neoclassicism; Industrialization and Modernisms; Chicago School; Vienna Secession; Art Nouveau and Catalan Modernism. Reference texts At the end of the course, the Professor will supply students with PDfs of articles, essays and texts on the topics addressed. This material will be available on Unistudium with access key. Handbooks: - Autori Vari, Lineamenti di storia dell'architettura, Armando Edizioni, 2019 (oppure Roma, Sovera Edizioni, 2018 o precedenti). - W. Curtis, L'architettura moderna dal 1900, Phaidon, 2006. Learning objectives The course provides cognitive support and the necessary critical tools for interpreting architecture from Romanesque period and the early twentieth century. Students must master the fundamental competences of history of architecture, namely periodization; nomenclature; founding elements; construction techniques; the building site; materials; compositional themes; architectural typologies; design and historical survey; representation of architecture; the commissioner's role and the relationship with the figurative arts; the project and its capacity to change the environment, the city and the territory over time. Prerequisites Knowledge of the topics treated in the History of Architecture course 1. In addition, the student should possess basic historical and cultural knowledge related to the historical periods covered. Teaching methods Ex-cathedra lectures, thematic and seminar insights, study visits. Further information The history of architecture embraces a series of exemplars that effectively document its phenomenological, symbolic and social value. Visiting these exemplars is essential when taking this subject, since it enables students to study first-hand the physical features of the buildings and their spatial and material characteristics. Hence visiting the works under study in situ is recommended to gain a more complete knowledge of them. Florence: Baptistery; Santa Maria del Fiore, church, dome, bell tower; San Miniato al Monte; Palazzo Vecchio and Uffizi; Santa Croce, Pazzi Chapel; Santa Maria Novella (façade); Piazza della Santissima Annunziata; Palazzo Medici Riccardi; San Lorenzo, church, Old Sacristy, Laurentian Library, Medici Chapels; Palazzo (façade) and Rucellai Loggia; Santo Spirito, church and sacristy; Pitti Palace and Boboli Gardens. Rome: Tempietto of St. Peter in Montorio; Capitoline Square; St. Peter's, basilica, canopy, piazza; Fountain of the Four Rivers in Piazza Navona; Cornaro Chapel in Santa Maria della Vittoria; Scala Regia in the Vatican; Gallery of Palazzo Capodiferro-Spada; Church and convent of San Carlo alle Quattro Fontane; church of Sant'Agnese in Agone; Sant'Ivo alla Sapienza. Assessment methods Oral exam on the entire program, from Romanesque architecture to Modernisms (Art Nouveau, Catalan Modernism and the Vienna Secession). Each student (if she/he wants) can provide the necessary iconographic material on a pc, tablet or paper. To pass the final exam students must show that they have achieved the objectives of the course. In particular, they must possess an in-depth knowledge (including the chronology, commissioner, design process, distributive and structural characteristics, materials, spatial and formal aspects) of the following buildings: 1. S. Foy, Conques 2. S. Martino, Tours 3. S. Sernin, Tolosa 4. Cattedrale di Santiago di Compostela 5. Cluny III, chiesa abbaziale 6. Milano, Sant’Ambrogio 7. Venezia, San Marco 8. Modena, Cattedrale 9. Pisa, cattedrale e torre pendente 10. Firenze, Battistero 11. Firenze, San Miniato al Monte 12. Assisi, San Rufino (Duomo) 13. Spoleto, Cattedrale di Santa Maria Assunta 14. Todi, concattedrale della Santissima Annunziata 15. Saint-Denis, coro 16. Sens, cattedrale di Saint Etienne 17. Noyon, cattedrale di Nôtre Dame 18. Laon, Cattedrale 19. Parigi, cattedrale di Nôtre Dame 20. Chartres, Cattedrale di Nôtre Dame 21. Reims, Cattedrale 22. Amiens, Cattedrale 23. Bourges, cattedrale di Saint-Étienne 24. Abbazia di Casamari, Veroli 25. Abbazia di Fossanova, Priverno 26. Santa Maria Novella, Firenze 27. Todi, San Fortunato 28. Assisi, basilica di San Francesco 29. Santa Croce, Firenze 30. Siena, cattedrale 31. Orvieto, cattedrale 32. Firenze, cattedrale 33. Ospedale degli Innocenti 34. Chiesa di San Lorenzo e Sagrestia Vecchia 35. Cappella Pazzi 36. Chiesa di Santo Spirito (e sacrestia) 37. Cupola, Tribune Morte e Lanterna di Santa Maria del Fiore 38. Il Tempio Malatestiano a Rimini 39. Palazzo Rucellai, Sacello e fronte di Santa Maria Novella 40. San Sebastiano e Sant’Andrea a Mantova 41. La città nel Quattrocento: Pienza 42. La città nel Quattrocento: Urbino 43. La città nel Quattrocento: Ferrara 44. La nascita del Palazzo nel Quattrocento: Palazzo Medici in via Larga 45. Santa Maria presso San Satiro 46. Santa Maria delle Grazie 47. Sant’Ambrogio (chiostri e canonica) 48. Chiostro di Santa Maria della Pace 49. San Pietro in Montorio 50. Cortile del Belvedere e Scala a Lumaca 51. Sacrestia Nuova 52. Libreria Medicea Laurenziana 53. Piazza del Campidoglio 54. Uffizi, Palazzo Vecchio e Corridoio Vasariano 55. Basilica di San Pietro (dall’epoca Costantiniana a Carlo Maderno) 56. Baldacchino di San Pietro 57. Piazza di San Pietro 58. Fontana dei Quattro Fiumi a piazza Navona 59. Cappella Cornaro a Santa Maria della Vittoria 60. La vicenda dei campanili di San Pietro 61. Scala Regia in Vaticano 62. Galleria di palazzo Capodiferro-Spada 63. Chiesa e convento di San Carlo alle Quattro Fontane 64. Chiesa di Sant’Agnese in Agone 65. Sant’Ivo alla Sapienza 66. L’architettura Neoclassica 67. Joseph Paxton, Crystal Palace 68. Gustave Eiffel, Tour Eiffel 69. Henry Labrouste, Bibliothèque de Sainte-Geneviève 70. Thomas Deane, Benjamin Woodward, Oxford Museum 71. William Le Baron Jenney, First Leiter Building, Chicago 72. William Le Baron Jenney, Fair Store, Chicago 73. Henry Hobson Richardson, Marshall Field Store, Chicago 74. Louis Sullivan, Dankmar Adler, Auditorium, Chicago 75. John Wellborn Root, Daniel Burnham, Monadnock Building, Chicago 76. Daniel Burnham, Charles Bowler Atwood, John Wellborn Root, Reliance Building, Chicago 77. Louis Sullivan, Dankmar Adler, Wainwright Building, St. Louis 78. Louis Sullivan, Dankmar Adler, Guaranty Building, Buffalo 79. Joseph Maria Olbrich, Palazzo della Secessione 80. Otto Wagner, Majolikahaus sulla Linke Wienzeile-Vienna 81. Josef Hoffmann, palazzo per Adolphe Stoclet 82. Villa Müller, Praga 83. Victor Horta, hôtels particuliers, Tassel-Bruxelles 84. Victor Horta, Maison du Peuple, Bruxelles 85. Hector Guimard, Maison Coilliot 86. Hector Guimard, Stazioni del Métro di Parigi 87. Antoni Gaudí, casa Batllò, Barcellona 88. Antoni Gaudí, per Eusebi Güell (Padiglioni Güell, Palazzo Güell, Parco Güell, Cantine Güell, Cripta della Colonia Güell e Colonia Güell) 89. Antoni Gaudí, parco Güell, Barcellona 90. Antoni Gaudí, casa Milà (la Pedrera), Barcellona 91. Antoni Gaudí, Sagrada Familia, Barcellona |
Obiettivi Agenda 2030 per lo sviluppo sostenibile | 11. Sustainable cities and communities. |