The Critical City Theories, Visions and Practice in contemporary Italian Architecture

Similar documents
SO 345 CULTURE AND URBAN CHANGE IN CONTEMPORARY ITALY IES Abroad Rome

Architecture (ARCH) Courses. Architecture (ARCH) 1

Syllabus, Modern Architecture, p. 1

DESIGNING ARCHEOLOGY International Call for Built Projects

Venetian Art and Architecture in the High Renaissance

CURATORSHIP OF ARCHITECTURE AND DESIGN

installation view. Photo: Patrick McElnea

Roma, 09 febbraio 2017

The Società degli Ingegneri e degli Architetti di Torino, or SIAT, ranks among the oldest Italian associations still active today.

PhD in Visual Studies, University of California, Irvine (Summer 2009)

ARCH 552: INTRODUCTION TO HISTORIC SITE DOCUMENTATION

Terra Migaki Design. Earth for contemporary design

Promoted and organised by: Politecnico Milano 1863 Polo territoriale di Lecco Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering

EUROPEAN CULTURAL ACADEMY. Short courses in Art, Architecture and Design

Building a research profile and applying for Postdocs

CONGRESS PROCEEDINGS

PLDV 426: History and Development of Cities 4 units, Fall Syllabus

Khushrud Village, Herat, Afghanistan

Course Overview. Course Premises

Common Design of a psychogeographic map at the ex Psychiatric Hospital of S. Maria della Pietà

Minimum Documentation Fiche composed by regional working party of LOMBARDIA, Italy

Graduate Concentration in the History + Theory of Architecture

University of Southern California School of Policy, Planning & Development. RED 542: Finance of Real Estate Development Fall 2009

INTBAU 2017 Annual Event. Heritage, Place, Design: Putting Tradition into Practice Milano, 5-6 July 2017

Piranesi, 2 Vol. By Luigi Ficacci

Urbs Aeterna. Needham High School. The Paideia Institute. Spring Break Trip to Rome, in partnership with

Rome 2017.Projects 7. Baths of Caracalla. E.U.R. district Rome, Italy Marcello Piacentini urban plan. Sensory Garden at Parco delle Rupicole

Venice Biennale 2012: The Piranesi Variations / Peter Eisenman By Karissa Rosenfield August 31, 2012

Architecture (ARCH) Courses. Architecture (ARCH) 1

Marco Facchine, State University of New York at Albany (SUNY) Fall semester 2014 November, 10 th 2014, Monday 1,15pm 3,15pm

DEGREE YEAR 1 SEMESTER 1 Description Subject Subject ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN AND THEORY 1 Code BAI 1212

ARCH 3301 BUILDING TECHNOLOGY REPRESENTATION. Dalhousie University School of Architecture

ARCH 242: BUILDING HISTORY II. History of the profession: Renaissance & baroque Architecture

Note: I reserve the right to modify this schedule during the duration of this course. Performance evaluation. Students' grades will be determined by:

Or, what is the current state of architectural technology and how does that drive or facilitate the development of the architectural idea?

One of the features of the IIDA Campus Center at San José State University is the Interior Design Student Organization (IDSO). IDSO is a student-led

UNIVERSITY OF MUMBAI

Art&Law. Identity and Conservation of Contemporary Artworks: Duties and Responsibility. International Summer School. Last update: March 2017

Adalberto Libera By E. Garofalo;L Veresani

ARCH 242: BUILDING HISTORY II. History of the profession: Renaissance & baroque Architecture

FINA2382 Real Estate Finance K. S. Maurice Tse The University of Hong Kong Spring

Curating: A Selective Bibliography Compiled by Aileen Smith, November 2004

independent architecture lab

Housecraft And Statecraft: Domestic Service In Renaissance Venice, By Professor Dennis Romano PhD READ ONLINE

The course meets the undergraduate experiential education (EE) requirement.

Course Specification. Course Code: TBC. 1. Course Title: History of Architecture and Urban Studies (HAUS) Academic Session: 2011/12

A. Lawrence Jenkens. Home: (336) Office: (336) Cell: (504)

Design Studies (DSN S)

Second Year HTS. Introduction

BOSTON UNIVERSITY SYDNEY INTERNSHIP PROGRAM

THE ENVIRONMENT BUILT AS A PLACE THAT CARE

Term I. contact info: Instructor: STEFANO MILANI. Student Assistant: Still image from the movie The Great Beauty (2013)

The course meets the undergraduate experiential education (EE) requirement.

María A. Cabrera Arús

Leonardo Da Vinci at the court of Milan

SHARÓNE L. TOMER CURRICULUM VITAE

Ecuador and last year in Guangzhou, China emphasizing the sub-theme Innovative Governance, Open Cities.

Introduction to Architecture Professor Michelle Apotsos

UGBA184: URBAN & REAL ESTATE ECONOMICS and CP207: LAND & HOUSING MARKET ECONOMICS

about the artists Six European artists formed the Cracking Art Group in 1993:

located at 33 Via Luca Pacioli. - Applications for planning permission; design and supervision of works for private clients.

Creative Director Wanted

Architecture. Admission and Degree Requirements. Architecture 1

POINTS + LINES: DIAGRAMS AND PROJECTS FOR THE CITY BY STAN ALLEN DOWNLOAD EBOOK : POINTS + LINES: DIAGRAMS AND PROJECTS FOR THE CITY BY STAN ALLEN PDF

Carlo Scarpa: Villa Ottolenghi (Italian Edition)

The Palestinian Museum of Natural History and Humankind: interview with artist Khalil Rabah

ART & POLITICS IN IMPERIAL ROME ARH 327N MWF 2 3. Dr. Penelope Davies DFA Tel Office hours: M 3-4

INNOVATIVE HOUSES: CONCEPTS FOR SUSTAINABLE LIVING BY AVI FRIEDMAN

Key Notions. Timeline 23/09/2018. Renaissance Architecture. Or, The Conquest of Spatial Reality

R E S I D E N C E I N M A L A G A

Architecture (ARCH) Courses

Aldo Rossi vs Andrea Branzi. HTS Week 3 / Architectural Coupling + 1 (Project)

Philosophies - ResArc PhD Course

Real Estate Finance K. S. Maurice Tse The University of Hong Kong Fall

Dipartimento di Architettura e Territorio darte

SIMONE MICHELI ARCHITECT

The European Research Infrastructures in Biomedical Sciences: Translating Discoveries into Innovation and Health Promotion

Brief for the 2017 National Architecture Conference Creative Director

Dalhousie University School of Architecture

Designers in Residence 2018 announced by Design Museum

A&H 317 ROME AND THE CLASSICAL TRADITION WINTER 2016 / SPRING SEMESTER 2016

FINA0805/FINA2382 Real Estate Finance K. S. Maurice Tse The University of Hong Kong Spring

The Italian Experience from the 2nd Century to W. Max Lucas University of Kansas

By Radical Design GIANNI PETTENA // PROFILE OF THE ARTIST. By Dr. Kostas Prapoglou

Arcadia University The College of Global Studies 2

Interested candidates who are qualified to pursue PhD-level research work are invited to submit their applications before Monday, 18 February 2019.

CL/AH 261 THE SPLENDOR OF ROMAN ART IES Abroad Buenos Aires

The complete Andrea Palladio: architecture, life and legacy

Financialisation and sustainability

Educational Programs at The Civita Institute: Facilities, Collaboration, Participants

RE-ENVISIONING THE AURELIAN CITY WALLS

Walter Ricciardi Past-President EUPHA President National Institute of Health (ISS)

This winter forum will be a two days meeting with open lectures from international scholars and round tables open to students and scholars.

Sarah M. Loose. History Department, 2130 JFSB Provo, UT PHONE (801)

Milano Farini Rail Yard

Milano Mozzafiato. The Residences for rent. * Stunning Milan

ACADEMIC COURSE SYLLABUS

Fall Thursday 2-4 pm, Carpenter 15. Jim Wright Office: Thomas 227, office hours Tu 11-12, Wed 3-4 and by appointment

Roma.Projects. E.U.R. district. Il Girasole Rome, Italy Luigi Moretti apartment, private house. Monument of Fosse Ardeatine

MEGAPROJECTS. TEACHING STAFF from the Department of Arts. TEACHING STAFF from the Department of Architecture

Transcription:

ARCH 3308-120: Special Topic in Theory The Critical City Theories, Visions and Practice in contemporary Italian Architecture Fall 2013 Cornell University Rome Program College of Architecture, Art and Planning Instructor: Gabriele Mastrigli e- mail: gabriele.mastrigli@gmail.com telephone: +39.335.5282145 Superstudio, Salvages of Italian Historic Centers, 1972 Rationale The course aims to offer to students a wide perspective of the role of Architecture in modern and contemporary times, regarding the specific context of Italian culture, in close relationship with the main objectives of the whole Cornell University Rome Program. Course Aims and Objectives The public realm is certainly the ultimate objective of those visions and concrete experiences that better represent contemporary Italian architecture. This is something deeply rooted in the past. The word 'city' itself comes from the latin cives (citizen), a word that still today evokes the implicit supremacy of inhabitants on the physical space that they live (the urbs). In fact, since the beginning of the XX century, architecture in Italy has been the tool not simply to shape the space of the city, but more to envisage the identities of the communities inhabiting it. 1

As a means to build the city in its widest, public dimension, architecture has been therefore a public activity in itself, closely connected to the political and cultural context, and often deeply critical towards the status quo. In this respect architecture in Italy has been intended not only as a tool to shelter the various activities of the changing society, but more to proactively engage and instrumentalize them in order to redefine the conditions of contemporary, urban life and make them "real" through new visions and theories. Rooted in the specificity of Italian situation, since modernity this idea of a critical approach to the very notions of 'architecture' and 'city' has generated all over Italy several powerful - as much as controversial - experiments: not only new buildings but also critical visions of a different society in the form of theories and discourses about the city as much as concrete and specific architectural and urban projects. Format and Procedures The Architecture Theory course at Cornell in Rome will therefore focus on that, opening the theory field to the dialogue with concrete experiences, and with the multiple relationships that architecture establishes with its cultural context. Getting out could be the keyword of this program structured in three main activities of exchanges between theory and reality, practice and society: 1) Open- air lessons will give the opportunity to discover, through specific itineraries in the city of Rome, some of the most relevant aspects of the contemporary city and their roots in the modern times - from the "invention" of public space, to the controversial monumentality of the most recent projects. 2) Meetings in some significant architecture offices and cultural institutions in Rome will actualize these issues concerning the construction of the public city in the actual practices and dynamics of transformation on the city field. 3) Speakers will be invited to trace a profile of Italian architecture theory seen from the intense relationships established with the modern and contemporary culture, focusing on the peculiar dialectics between architecture and history, politics, urbanism, media, etc. Those activities will be organized according to different themes, each of them dealing with a different aspect of the relationship between architecture and the city. Those themes - Space, History, Infrastructure, Culture - will also define four palimpsests for a possible interpretation of the future of Rome, that will be the object of a final project to be presented in the form of a paper and a slideshow. Course Requirements 1. Class attendance and participation policy Class sessions usually will be held during morning hours, between 9:00 and 13:00. (See detailed calendar and syllabus for occasional variations). Meeting is in any case at Palazzo Lazzaroni also in the case of the "on site" lessons. In this case we will utilize photocopied materials in the course handbook to provide those crucial visual documents and texts needed to understand our objects of study. Attendance at all class sessions is required. 2. Course readings As I often say, the city is our text. Most of the information will be, in fact, provided through the direct experience of the different visits and meetings organized during the course. Nonetheless some readings will be necessary to better put in context the different issues faced during the course. Required texts Terry Kirk, The Architecture of Modern Italy, vol. 2, Vision of Utopia 1900- present, New York: Princeton Architectural Press, 2005; (especially chapters about Rome); AAVV, "The Rome Universal Exhibition 1942", Architettura. Rivista del Sindacato Nazionale Fascista, special monographic issue, dec. 1938; 2

Luigi Ficacci, "The Discovery of Rome out of the Spirit of Piranesi", in Luigi Ficacci, Giovanni Battista Piranesi: the Complete Etchings, Koln: Taschen, 2000, pp. 8-49; Peter Lang, William Menking, Superstudio. Life without objects, Milan, Skira, 2003; "A reading of Rome through its streets", in Pier Vittorio Aureli, Maria Giudici, Gabriele Mastrigli, Martino Tattara (ed.), Rome: the Centre(s) Elsewhere, Milan, Skira, 2010 pp. 12-53; Other readings in the form of handouts will be provided during the course. Background readings Manfredo Tafuri, History of Italian Architecture 1944-1985, Cambridge- London: The MIT Press, 1989; Stefan Grundmann (ed.), The Architecture of Rome, Stuttgart/London: Edition Axel Menges, 2007; 3. Credits This is a 3 credits course. 4. Additional requirements: It would be helpful to have cameras in order to take pictures during the different visits Grading procedures There will be a term project to be presented and discussed in the day of the final presentation. The project will have the form of a paper (5-10 pages) that will be presented by each student with the help of visuals (powerpoint slides). This assignment will allow students to chose a specific argument and propose a critical reading of it, within the frame of the course themes. The relative value of assigned work in determination of the final course grade is the following: Attendance and participation: 30%; Project: 70%. Academic Integrity Each student in this course is expected to abide by the Cornell University Code of Academic Integrity. Please refer to the link below or speak with me concerning any questions: http://cuinfo.cornell.edu/academic/aic.html Any work submitted by a student in this course for academic credit will be the student s own work, except in the cases of projects that are specifically structured as group endeavors. You are encouraged to study together and to discuss information and concepts covered in lectures with other students. You can give consulting help to or receive consulting help from such students. However, this permissible cooperation should never involve one student having possession of a copy of all or part of work done by someone else, in the form of an e- mail, an e- mail attachment file, a diskette, or a hard copy. Should copying occur, both the student who copied work from another student and the student who gave material to be copied will automatically receive a zero for the assignment. Penalty for violation of this Code can also be extended to include failure of the course and University disciplinary action. During examinations, you must do your own work. Talking or discussion is not permitted during the examinations, nor may you compare papers, copy from others, or collaborate in any way. Any collaborative behavior during the examinations will result in failure of the exam, and may lead to failure of the course and University disciplinary action. Accommodations for students with disabilities In compliance with the Cornell University policy and equal access laws, I am available to discuss appropriate academic accommodations that may be required for student with disabilities. Requests for academic accommodations are to be made during the first three weeks of the semester, except for unusual circumstances, so arrangements can be made. Students are encouraged to register with Student Disability Services to verify their eligibility for appropriate accommodations. 3

Course Schedule: (May change to accommodate guest presenters & student needs) Part 1: Space Lecture: Gabriele Mastrigli. Italy. Architecture and the Project of the Public Realm Itinerary: Piazza Venezia / Via del Mare, Circo Massimo, Passeggiata Archeologica, Caracalla Baths, Garbatella District, Mercati Generali Visit: Luca Galofaro. Ian+. Recent Projects Part 2: History Itinerary: EUR - Palazzo della Civiltà Italiana, Palazzo dei Congressi, Museo della Civiltà Romana, Nuovo Centro dei Congressi; Visit: Projecting Rome. Piranesi at the Calcografia Nazionale Field Trip Modern and Contemporary Architecture in Rome: 1. Aventino Post office; 2. Garbatella; 3. Fosse Ardeatine; 4. E42 Headquarters; 5. Corviale; 6. Y2000 Church (together with Francesco Garofalo's Modern History course) Part 3: Infrastructure Lecture: Cristiano Toraldo di Francia: Supersystems. Superstudio and the Myth of Modernization Lecture: Gabriele Mastrigli: Rome. Architecture, Ideology, City. Itinerary: Termini Station, via Marsala, Porta Tiburtina, Tangenziale, Verano, Stazione Tiburtina. Lecture: Joseph Cho: Architecture and Graphic design in Italy in the Sixties Part 4: Culture Round table: Writing Architecture. Matteo Costanzo (San Rocco), Luca Galofaro (the booklist), Cherubino Gambardella (Dromos), Manuel Orazi (Quodlibet). Lecture: Pippo Ciorra. Curating Architecture. Itinerary: Villaggio Olimpico, Auditorium Parco della Musica, MAXXI 4

Final Presentations and Discussion Additional Resource Readings Italo Insolera, Roma moderna. Un secolo di storia urbanistica 1870-1970, Torino: Einaudi, 1971; Spiro Kostof, The Third Rome: 1870-1950: Traffic and Glory, Berkeley: University of California, 1973; Dennis P. Doordan, Building Modern Italy: Italian Architecture, 1914-1936, New York: Princeton Architectural Press, 1988; Giorgio Ciucci, Gli Architetti e il Fascismo. Architettura e Città 1922.1944, Torino: Einaudi, 1989; Richard Etlin, Modernism in Italian Architecture, 1890-1940, Cambridge- London: The MIT Press, 1991; Maristella Casciato, "Neorealism in Italian Architecture", in Sarah Williams Goldhagen and Réjean Legault (eds.) Anxious Modernisms, Experimentation in Postwar Architectural Culture, Cambridge- London: The MIT Press, 2001; Koff, Sondra Z., Koff, Stephen P.: Italy - From the First to the Second Republic, London: Routledge, 1999; Terry Kirk, The Architecture of Modern Italy, vol. 1, The challenge of Tradition 1750-1900, New York: Princeton Architectural Press, 2005; 5