Reinventing Pompeii

  • From Wall Painting to Iron Construction in the Industrial Revolution
  • Gabriella Cianciolo Cosentino

  • Collana
    Saggi di Storia dell’Arte
  • Anno
    2019
  • Pagine
    256, con oltre 50 illustrazioni a colori e in b/n
  • Formato
    15,5 x 21,5 cm, brossura
  • ISBN
    978-88-85795-39-6
  • Lingua
    inglese

  • Prezzo
    € 40,00€ 38,00 Sconto 5%

L’autore

Gabriella Cianciolo Cosentino is an architect and architectural historian trained in Palermo, with a strong record of international academic publications. Her research interests focus on nineteenth- and twentieth-century European architecture, reception studies, and heritage conservation. She has received numerous post-doctoral fellowships and research grants from Italian, German, and American institutions, including the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation, the Bibliotheca Hertziana, the Italian Academy for Advanced Studies in America (Columbia University), the German Re- search Foundation, and the Max-Planck Society. She is currently teaching history of architecture at the Technische Universität München and coordinating an interdisciplinary research project on Pompeii based at the Kunsthistorisches Institut in Florenz. 

L’opera

Pompeii exists not only in its concrete materiality in-situ and ex-situ, but also in countless adaptations and re-interpretations which shape our cities and deeply affect the modern world. This book examines the impact of Pompeian wall paintings on European architectural design and discourse during the Industrial Revolution, with particular focus on the role of the Vesuvian city as a laboratory for the creation of a new ‘iron style’. When cast iron first appeared as a building material, architects faced unprecedented challenges after millennia of stone construction: cast iron required a new language, a new syntax, new proportions and ornamental patterns suited to the characteristics of the material and in line with the functional and aesthetic standards of modern cities. In this context, the imaginary structures painted on the walls of Pompeian buildings, interpreted as a prefiguration of a light, airy, dematerialised architectural order, were adapted to the needs of the time through a process of transfer from one medium (painted surface) to another (three-dimensional structure). A selection of case studies – including works by Karl Friedrich Schinkel, Henri Labrouste, Jakob Ignaz Hittorff, and Gottfried Semper – illustrate how the so-called Pompeian arabesques, i.e. models, motifs, and ideas found in fresco paintings, were transformed into iron elements at various scales, ranging from the decorative detail to the structural support. This study also explores other forms of dialogue with the ancient city, both theoretical and applied, as well as archaeological, art historical, and philosophical issues related to the paintings and their afterlife. 

Sommario

Acknowledgements – Introduction - Pompeii as a Laboratory of Applied Creativity: Towards an Iron Style – Scope and Methodo- logy - Vitruvius’s Monsters and their Afterlife: Legibility and Transmediality – I. Beyond Decoration: The Arabesque - Candelabra and Harpaginetuli as Compositional Elements - Goethe, the Arabesque, and Oriental Pompeii - Kant’s Designs à la Grecque and the Free Beauties - Nineteenth-Century Ornament Theories – II. Anticipation: Karl Friedrich Schinkel - Trips to Pompeii, Naples, and London - Furniture and Patterns for Craftsmen - From the Wall Decoration to the Third Dimension - Cast Iron between Art, Industry, and National Identity – III. Innovation: Henri Labrouste - Journeys, Drawings, and Readings - Illusionist Paintings, Iron Structures, and Design Principles - Historical Presence and the Néo-Grec - Decorated Construction and Engineering Aesthetics – IV. Dissemination: Ambrose Poynter and Luigi Canina - Imaginative Decoration and the New Proportions - The Introduction of Iron and Relative Beauty - The Style of Architecture on the Wall and Beyond - National Mania and Ubiquity – V. Experimentation: Jakob Ignaz Hittorff - Publications and the Graphic Estate - New Boundaries of Space and Decoration - Pozzuoli, Pompeii, and Pe- tra - Designs and Buildings – VI. Metabolisation: Gottfried Semper - Buried in the Buried City - Preliminary Remarks and Other Writings - Metal Tectonics and Theatricality - Floating Pompeii – Conclusion - Overcoming the Taboo: Dialectical Virtues and Re- verberations – Bibliography – Index – Illustration Credits