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3.2
COA 3115: ART AND ARCHITECTURE IN ITALY I, 3-0-3 |
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Professor Douglas Allen
Associate Professor Athanassios Economou
Professor Mario Carpo
College of Architecture
Georgia Institute of Technology
Summer 2010
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| PURPOSE
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This course is organized as part of a three course
sequence on the interrelated subjects of architecture,
urban design, painting, and sculpture in Classical Greece
and Italy. Aimed primarily at undergraduate students
in disciplines other than architecture, but open to
architecture students as well, its purpose is to provide
an intensive on site investigation of the role that
the arts have played in the development of the Greco-Roman
and Italian civilization, and by extension the influence
of this civilization on the historical development of
the visual arts in the western world. This course is
distinguished from the first and third in the sequence
primarily by its emphasis on the Roman period and on
issues of urban planning and design, and their relationship
to architecture, painting and sculpture. This course
has Institute approval for humanities credit.
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| FORMAT
This course is organized around a two and a half week
residence period based in Rome and Sorrento. On
site lectures are given Monday through Friday from 8:00
AM to 1:30 PM. This schedule will vary, depending upon the site and the subject.
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COURSE REQUIREMENTS
In addition to the on-site lectures, students are required to conduct directed research of an assigned building, its paintings and sculpture and to make a presentation of their research to the class. This constitutes thirty percent of the grade for the course. In addition to the presentation, students are required to maintain field notes during lectures and a final journal that consists of a conversion of all their daily notes along with commentary, historical data as well as other media including photographs, drawings, sketches, memorabilia and so forth. Both the field notes and the johrnal consitute fifty percent of the grade. A final exam in the end of class constitutes a twenty percent of the grade. Details about all three requiremetns follow below.
Field notes/Journal
(50 %)
Each student is required to turn in:
- a notebook with field notes; and
- a final journal.
The notebook consists of field notes made on site during the lectures and include a daily description of notes from lectures, notes from student presentations, as well as museum studies of individual art pieces. Daily notes should record information covered by the
professors as well as brief sketches and diagrams made onsite. For Architecture majors, recording
of design information including dimensions, materials,
color, etc. is extremely important. Additionally, museum collections - and they are many! - should be looked at constructively; a minimum
of two pieces (sculpture, painting, porcelain, furniture,
illuminated manuscript, etc.) should be selected during the course and properly described and analyzed on site in the notebook. For example, if the piece is a painting, then the analysis should dicsuss the composition of the painting,
geometric organization, theme, symbolism,
material, artist, etc. Finally, at the end of each
day's entry a section titled "reflections"
should include student's own thoughts on the information
they are learning. For example you may relate information
on the Roman plan of Florence with the plans of Rome
and Ostia or its relationship to a city in the United
States. Alternatively, if this is the first Baroque
church you have visited then how does the design differ
from an Early Renaissance or Medieval church you have
seen?
The journal consists of a conversion of the field notes in a formal presentation including original text, commentary, general historical data, reflections, as well as digital or scanned photos, diagrams, sketches, drawings, and other media if appropriate. Both the notebook and the journal are turned in at the end of the semester and are graded for completeness, comprehensiveness, understanding of the material, and critical commentary on sites visited. Students' background, i.e. - major, grad, undergrad -will be
taken into consideration when reviewing the field-notes notebook as well as the journal.
Presentation
(30%)
Each student is required to give one fifteen-minute presentation, on site, of particular buildings or works of art or specific topics relevant to the program selected by the faculty. Students may combine presentations for one or more of the courses in the study abroad program and may work in teams for more ambitious projects; in all cases the requirements of each presentation will increase proportionally in modules of fifteen minutes each. Presentations may vary in length for particular buildings and may include all painting and sculpture contained within. Typical cases are medieval or renaissance churches though other important buildings and sites will be included. Presentations may also include topics pertaining to the history and culture of the classical world that created the architecture and art that is the focus of this program: these topics may include aspects of culture and myths, history of science, history of religion, and so on.
Examination
(20%)
A final test/or brief written essay is given in the end of the course.
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SCHEDULE
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| Metapontum |
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Metaponton: Temple of Hera; Agora: Temples A, B, C, D: Hera, Apollo; Athena; Artemis; Archaeological Museum; Taras: Archaeological Museum of Tarantum
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J.C. Carter, 2000. The Chora and the Polis of Metaponto. |
| Paestum |
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Temple of Hera I; Hera II; Agora; Roman Forum; Amphitheater; Bouleuterion; Heroon; Temple of Athena; Archaeological Museum.
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Greco Emanuele: “Poseidonia
– Paestum” 1996 |
Pompeii |
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Porta Marina; Forum; Temple of Apollo; Basilica; Building of Eumachia; Temple of Vespasian; House of the Faun; House of the Vettii; Villa of the Mysteries; Forum Baths; Triangular Forum; Theaters; Palaestra; Amphitheater
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Amadeo Maiuri, "Pompeii",
in Scientific American, April, 1958
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Herculaneum |
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House of Aristides; House of Argus; The House of the Genius; House of the Alcove; College of the Augustales; House of Bicentenary; House of the Deer; House of Neptune and Amphitrite; House of Opus Craticium; House of the Mosaic Atrium; House of Relief of Telephus; House of the Gem; House of the Carbonized Shutters Samnite House; Baths;
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Joseph Day Deiss, "Death of
a Roman Town" in, Herculaneum, Harper and Row,
New York, 1985 |
Forum Romanum, Palatine |
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The Founding of Rome; Capitoline; The Forum Romanum; Curia; Comitium, Basilica Fulvia-Aemelia and Julia, Cloaca Maxima, Fons Juturnae; Arch of Septimius Severus;;Regia, House of the Vestals; Temple of Vesta Temple of Castor and Pollux; Temple of Saturn;; Mundus and Umbilicus;Temple of Antoninus and Faustina; Temple of Caesar Arch of Titus
Palatine: House of Augustus; House of Livia; Domus Tiberiana; Domus Flavia; Domus Augustana; Domus Severiana.
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Paul McKendrick, "Early Rome",
in The Mute Stones Speak, St. Martin's Press, New
York, 1960
William MacDonald, "Domitian's Palace",
in The Architecture of the Roman Empire, Yale
University Press, 1982, revised edition
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The
Empire of Rome |
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Coliseum; Arch of Constantine; Temple of Venus and Roma; Imperial Fora; Spice Markets of Trajan; Pantheon
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William MacDonald, "Trajan's
Markets",in The Architecture of the Roman Empire,
Yale University Press, New Haven, 1982, revised
edition
Vitruvius, The Ten Books on Architecture, Morris
Hickey Morgan, (trans.) Dover Publications, New
York, 1960., Book I: "The Education of the
Architect" and"The Fundamental Principles
of Architecture" , Book II: "Methods
of Building Walls", Book IV: "On the
Origins of the Three Orders and the Proportions
of the Corinthian Capital" and "The
Proportions of Doric Temples”
Paul MacKendrick, "Flavian Rome", in
The Mute Stones Speak, St. Martin's Press, New
York, 1960
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The
City as Ritual Myth |
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Roman Colonial Cities: Ostia; Necropolis; Porta Romana; Baths of Neptune; Square of the Guilds; Theater; Castrum; House of Diana; Insula of the Thermopolium; Insula of the Paintings; Forum; Temple of Roma and Augustus; Basilica; Forum Baths; Archaeological Museum
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Donald J. Watts and Carol Watts,
"A Roman Apartment Complex", in Scientific
American, December, 1986
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Rus
et Urbs |
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Pecile; Maritime Theater; Hall of Philosophers; Heliocaminus Baths; Nymphaeum Stadium; Canopus; Great Baths; Small Baths; Piazza d’Oro; Hall of Doric Pillars; Palace; Greek and Latin Libraries; Temple of Venus; Quarter of vigils; One hundred Rooms; Greek Theatre. Villa D’ESte
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John Clarke, "Space and Ritual
in Domus, Villa, and Insula", in The Houses
of Roman Italy, University of California Press,
Berkeley,1991
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Medieval
Rome |
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San Clemente ;Santa Sabina; Santa Maria in Trastevere; Tempietto of San Pietro in Montorio
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H.W. Janson, History of Art, Abrams,
New York, 1977. p.p. 166-203
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Renaissance
Rome |
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Piazza Campidoglio; Palazzo Conservatori / Capitoline Museum; Baths of Diocletian - Basilica of St. Mary of the Angels and the Martyrs
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James Ackerman, "The Capitoline
Hill", in The Architecture of Michaelangelo,
Viking Press, New York, 1961 |
Vatican City |
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Basilica of St. Peter; Scavi di San Pietro ; Vatican Museum
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H.W. Janson, History of Art, Abrams,
New York, 1977. p.p. 203-233 |
Renaissance Villas |
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Villa Gulia
Etruscan Museum
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John Clarke, "Space and Ritual
in Domus, Villa, and Insula", in The Houses
of Roman Italy, University of California Press,
Berkeley, 1991
James S. Ackerman, The Villa, Princeton University
Press, Princeton, NJ. 1990
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Renaissance
Churches |
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Baths of Diocletian
Santa Maria degli Angeli
Santa Maria Maggiore
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H.W. Janson, History of Art, Abrams,
New York, 1977. p.p. 166-203
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READINGS
An anthology of readings is required. This anthology
will be supplemented by readings from Alta MacAdam, The Blue Guide to Rome,
W.W. Norton, New York, 1995 edition. The Blue Guides
are the best general purpose source for guided study
of the art and architecture of Rome and Florence, as
well as many other cities in Europe, North America,
and the Middle East. Unlike most guide books, they do
not contain information on hotels, restaurants, etc.
They do contain good maps as well as historical summaries,
lists of Emperors, Popes, etc. They are invaluable in
that they give specific descriptions of the entire body
of works contained in all major churches and museums. |
LINKS
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26MB |
Lawrence
Wodehouse, Marian Moffet, 1989. Roman
Architecture, in A History of Western
Architecture, Mayfield Publishing Co, California,
pp.62-87.
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20MB |
David
Watkin, 2000. Early
Christian and Byzantine Architecture, in A
History of Western Architecture, Watson-Guptill
Publications, New York , pp. 88-102
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5MB |
Frank
Sear, 1982, Roman
Architects, Building Techniques and Materials,
in Roman Architecture, Cornell University
Press, Ithaca, N.Y. , pp. 73-77
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42MB |
Frank
Sear, 1982, Trajan
and Hadrian, in Roman Architecture,
Cornell University Press, Ithaca, N.Y. , pp. 154-184.
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30MB |
Frank
Sear, 1982. Two
Roman Towns: Pompeii and Ostia, in Roman
Architecture, Cornell University Press, Ithaca,
N.Y. , pp. 103-133.
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32MB |
H.
W. Janson, 1997. Roman
Sculpture and Painting, in History of
Art (4th Edition), Abrams, New York, pp.228-252.
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19MB |
Christopher
Hibbert, 1985. Myths,
Monarchs and Republicans, in Rome: the
Biography of a City, W.W. Norton, New York,
pp.3-23.
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