{"title":"Tektonikon和Surfacescape:意大利文艺复兴时期的建筑和身体","authors":"M. Trachtenberg","doi":"10.1086/697116","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"ONE OF MY CURRENT RESEARCH PROJECTS centers on architectural authorship. Through issues of authorship of a single building I came to reconsider the relationship of body and building in Renaissance architecture by devising the categories of Tektonikon and Surfacescape and exploring their implications— categories to be studied in the course of this essay. It is this train of thought that I present here as a lightly edited version of the Agnes Mongan lecture as it was delivered at I Tatti in 2016. The building at issue is the Pazzi Chapel in Florence. Before my research, it was regarded as the defining work of Brunelleschi, the “inventor” of Renaissance architecture. Emblematic of the entire Renaissance movement, it was considered a high point in architectural history. Thus, the chapel was made the frontispiece of the Heydenreich-Lotz quattrocento volume of the canonical Pelican History of architecture in its original 1970s edition. It also appeared on the cover of the box for the book and on the dust jacket as well. The chapel received celebrity treatment in other standard textbooks. In H. W. Janson’s widely used survey of the history of art, for example, it is allowed an exceptional four images. Its facade was even depicted on several denominations of Italian banknotes in the late twentieth century (before the Euro). Thus, one can understand why many people, and not only art historians, were sensitive to any questioning of Brunelleschi’s authorship of the chapel, as I was doing in lectures and at conferences beginning in the mid-1990s. Such sensitivity became shock and anger, mainly among Italians, particularly Florentines, when at the invitation of Francesco Dal Co, editor of the prestigious architectural journal Casabella, I published a notorious article in 1996, “Why the Pazzi Chapel Is Not","PeriodicalId":42173,"journal":{"name":"I Tatti Studies","volume":"266 1","pages":"7 - 45"},"PeriodicalIF":0.1000,"publicationDate":"2018-03-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Tektonikon and Surfacescape: Architecture and the Body in the Italian Renaissance\",\"authors\":\"M. Trachtenberg\",\"doi\":\"10.1086/697116\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"ONE OF MY CURRENT RESEARCH PROJECTS centers on architectural authorship. 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引用次数: 1
摘要
我目前的一个研究项目是关于建筑创作的。通过单个建筑的作者身份问题,我开始重新考虑文艺复兴时期建筑中身体和建筑的关系,通过设计Tektonikon和Surfacescape的类别,并探索它们的含义——这是本文将要研究的类别。我在这里将这一思路作为艾格尼丝·蒙根(Agnes Mongan) 2016年在I塔蒂(I Tatti)演讲的略微编辑版呈现给大家。争议的建筑是佛罗伦萨的帕齐教堂。在我研究之前,它被认为是文艺复兴建筑的“发明者”布鲁内莱斯基的标志性作品。它是整个文艺复兴运动的象征,被认为是建筑史上的一个高点。因此,这座教堂成为了Heydenreich-Lotz在20世纪70年代原版的鹈鹕建筑历史的四世纪卷的扉页。它也出现在书的盒盖和防尘套上。在其他标准教科书中,这座教堂受到了名人的关注。例如,在h.w.詹森(h.w. Janson)被广泛使用的艺术史调查中,它被允许使用四张特殊的图像。它的正面甚至被描绘在20世纪后期(在欧元出现之前)几种面额的意大利钞票上。因此,人们可以理解为什么许多人,不仅仅是艺术史学家,对布鲁内莱斯基对教堂的作者身份的任何质疑都很敏感,就像我在20世纪90年代中期开始的讲座和会议上所做的那样。当我应著名建筑杂志《Casabella》的编辑弗朗西斯科·达尔(Francesco Dal Co)的邀请,于1996年发表了一篇臭名昭著的文章《为什么帕齐教堂没有》(Why the Pazzi Chapel Is Not)时,这种敏感变成了震惊和愤怒,主要是在意大利人,尤其是佛罗伦萨人当中
Tektonikon and Surfacescape: Architecture and the Body in the Italian Renaissance
ONE OF MY CURRENT RESEARCH PROJECTS centers on architectural authorship. Through issues of authorship of a single building I came to reconsider the relationship of body and building in Renaissance architecture by devising the categories of Tektonikon and Surfacescape and exploring their implications— categories to be studied in the course of this essay. It is this train of thought that I present here as a lightly edited version of the Agnes Mongan lecture as it was delivered at I Tatti in 2016. The building at issue is the Pazzi Chapel in Florence. Before my research, it was regarded as the defining work of Brunelleschi, the “inventor” of Renaissance architecture. Emblematic of the entire Renaissance movement, it was considered a high point in architectural history. Thus, the chapel was made the frontispiece of the Heydenreich-Lotz quattrocento volume of the canonical Pelican History of architecture in its original 1970s edition. It also appeared on the cover of the box for the book and on the dust jacket as well. The chapel received celebrity treatment in other standard textbooks. In H. W. Janson’s widely used survey of the history of art, for example, it is allowed an exceptional four images. Its facade was even depicted on several denominations of Italian banknotes in the late twentieth century (before the Euro). Thus, one can understand why many people, and not only art historians, were sensitive to any questioning of Brunelleschi’s authorship of the chapel, as I was doing in lectures and at conferences beginning in the mid-1990s. Such sensitivity became shock and anger, mainly among Italians, particularly Florentines, when at the invitation of Francesco Dal Co, editor of the prestigious architectural journal Casabella, I published a notorious article in 1996, “Why the Pazzi Chapel Is Not