Layers of Venice. Architecture, Arts and Antiquities at Rialto
Descrizione
The book offers a greater understanding of the multiple layers of meaning that have been superimposed in the course of the Medieval and Modern Ages in the Rialto area.
The authors follow the Leitmotiv of the memorial component that each operation of architectural reuse has carried in the history of the church of San Giacomo di Rialto, a building which stands, emblematically, as a sort of architectural relic.
Adopting this principle, the book offers an in-depth analysis of the spatial model, the reuse of individual architectural and decorative elements but also, on a larger scale, the different configurations of the urban context (the Rialto market) through the centuries, after repeated destruction, reconstruction and transformation.
By adopting this multi-scale approach, the book reveals the key role played by the church in the narrative strategy adopted to perpetually renew the myth of Venice, taking on a conceptual and polysemantic dimension where each component (object, context, meaning, function, image) constitutes an element cultural memory, with each leaving a tangible trace of its own.
Editore:
Edizioni Ca’ Foscari - Venice University PressData:
2023Formato
application/pdf (36.14 MB)
libro (altezza: 22 cm, larghezza: 24 cm)
Soggetto
• Lieu de mémoire • High Middle Ages • Venice • Trading places • Banks • Giustizia • San Giacomo di Rialto • Greek cruciform • Rialto • Early Byzantine Capitals • Alessandro Vittoria • Venetian Architecture • Medieval town • Restoration • Reused materials • Early modern trade • Reuse of building materials • Early modern commercial institutions • Acqua alta • Bridge of Rialto • History of Venice • Medieval • Venetian Trade Guilds • Romanesque • Venetian Renaissance Sculpture • Ancient Roman Capitals • Spolia • Byzantine • Church of San Giacomo at Rialto • Vigilio Rubini • Urban History • Andrea dall’Aquila • Concieri • Venetian early modern architecture • History of Architecture • Basilica • Stones • Medieval architecture • Marbles • Venetian Republic





