47291 - History of Architecture 2

Academic Year 2022/2023

Learning outcomes

At the end of the course the student is able to recognise, historically place and critically evaluate the major architectures of the modern and contemporary period, from the 18th century up to the Second World War, knowing the main construction aspects and having the ability to place them in the city and the territory in which they are located. In particular, the student is able to - carry out archival research; - carry out bibliographical research; - critically structure a historical study path; - recognise the main systems of forms in relation to the said historical period; - describe and comment, in verbal and written form, an architecture belonging to the said historical period.

Course contents

The course is divided into two modules held respectively by Dr. Daniele Pascale Guidotti Magnani and Dr. Matteo Cassani Simonetti. The chronological span covered by the course has as its extremes the Roman Baroque and the present day. The contents presented during the lessons will be articulated as follows:

Module 1. The Roman Baroque
The Masters: Bernini, Borromini, Pietro da Cortona
Rainaldi, Fontana
The Roman 18th century

Module 2. Baroque experiences in Italy
Veneto: Longhena, Massari, Tirali
Emilia: Monti, Vigarani, Bibiena
Piemonte: Guarini, Juvarra, Vittone

Module 3. International Baroque Experiences
France (Mansart, Hardouin-Mansart, Le Vau)
Austria and Germany (Fischer von Erlach, Hildebrandt)
England: from Palladianism to Wren

Module 4. Comparing Capitals from Baroque to Neoclassicism
Roma
Torino
Paris
London, Edinburgh, Bath

Module 5. The rediscovery of antiquity in the second half of the 18th century
The antiquities of Athens, Paestum and Pompei
Piranesi

Module 6. Experiences of European Neoclassicism
France (architects of Utopia: Boullée, Ledoux, Lequeu)
England (the Adams, Soane, Nash)
Russia (Quarenghi)
Germany (Schinkel, Klenze)

Module 7. Architecture and the City during the Industrial Revolution
The architecture of Eclecticism and the new materials
The English Utopians and the applied arts
The capitals of modernity in Europe: Paris, London, Barcelona
America. Classicism and the Chicago School

Module 8. Modernity
Towards modernity. Art nouveau, jugend stijl, modernism
Art and architecture. The historical avant-gardes
From the Deutscher Wekbund to the Bauhaus
Classicism or modernity. Architecture in Italy, Germany, USSR

Module 9. The masters of 20th century architecture
The masters of modern architecture. Frank Lloyd Wright
The masters of modern architecture. Le Corbusier
The masters of modern architecture. Mies van der Rohe
The masters of modern architecture. Alvar Aalto and Louis Kahn

Module 10. Reconstruction and post-war architecture
Reconstruction in Europe
The American context
The activity of the masters in the post-war period
From Modern to International Style

Module 11. After the masters of modern architecture and up to postmodernism
From the Ciam to Team X. The legacies of the modern tradition
Radical architecture and the recovery of the rational
Architecture as design
Postmodernism in architecture

Module 12. On the threshold of the chronicle. Some alternatives after postmodernism
High tech
The genius loci, critical regionalism and the environmental paradigm
Deconstructivism
Digital architecture, the Bilbao phenomenon and the archistars

Readings/Bibliography

Modulo 1:

G. Cricco, F. Di Teodoro, Itinerario nell'arte, Versione Gialla, vol.3, , Bologna, Zanichelli, 2016 (4° edizione)

G. Cricco, F. Di Teodoro, Itinerario nell'arte, Versione Gialla, vol.4, Bologna, Zanichelli, 2016 (4° edizione)

 We strongly recommend reading the texts by R. Wittkower, Arte e Architettura in Italia 1600-1750, Torino, Einaudi, varie edizioni

Modulo 2:

L. Benevolo, Storia dell’architettura moderna, Roma-Bari, Laterza, 2014 (I ed. 1960)

L. Benevolo, L’architettura del nuovo millennio, Roma-Bari, Laterza, 2014 (I ed. 2006)

Teaching methods

Lectures, seminars, tutorials, study trips.

The student is also called upon to elaborate a timeline relating to the main works and events presented during the lectures and indicated in the bibliography. Examples for the elaboration of this study tool are uploaded on the Virtual Platform.
The student is also invited to make use of a personal notebook in which he/she can illustrate, by means of drawings and photographs, the most representative buildings discussed during the lectures.

Assessment methods



The History of Architecture II examination aims to verify the attainment of the knowledge and skills foreseen. The minimum threshold of learning is the student's ability to place the works of architecture illustrated during the course in the correct chronological order and to understand their formal, linguistic, social and functional values in the cultural context of their time.

The examination consists of verifying the student's learning of the contents of the teachings of the two modules that make up the course, which will take the form of a final interview. The grade will be determined by the sum of the assessments:

1: Knowledge and ability to deal critically with the topics covered in Module 1 (0 to 15 points)

2: Knowledge of and ability to critically address the topics covered in Module 2 (0 to 15 points)

Teaching tools

Lessons will take place with constant use of graphic and photographic material that will be presented through video projections. The teaching material will be accessible from the dedicated page on the Virtual Platform.

Office hours

See the website of Matteo Cassani Simonetti

See the website of Daniele Pascale Guidotti Magnani

SDGs

Quality education Gender equality Sustainable cities

This teaching activity contributes to the achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals of the UN 2030 Agenda.