Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Abbreviations
- Introduction: Embracing Specificity, Embracing Place
- 1 Architecture on Paper: The Development and Function of Architectural Drawings in the Renaissance
- Part I Marking Place
- Part II Teaching Place
- Part III Excavating Place
- Index of Names
- Index of Subjects and Places
4 - Architecture for Music: Sonorous Spaces in Sacred Buildings in Renaissance and Baroque Rome
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 April 2022
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Abbreviations
- Introduction: Embracing Specificity, Embracing Place
- 1 Architecture on Paper: The Development and Function of Architectural Drawings in the Renaissance
- Part I Marking Place
- Part II Teaching Place
- Part III Excavating Place
- Index of Names
- Index of Subjects and Places
Summary
Abstract
Architectural spaces are usually considered only in their visual and three-dimensional character. However, the proper experience of space is multisensory. Sonority is undoubtedly the non-visual characteristic that most affects architecture, influencing its three-dimensional shape, and the size and distribution of its individual parts. Early modern sacred architecture is a case in point. Focusing on Rome and the development of architecture in relation to musical practices, this article demonstrates how architectural forms evolved through a process that ranged from provisional installations to the design of entirely new churches and oratories. In the Baroque period, these religious structures were conceived as synaesthetic spaces of sonority and architecture, in which vision, hearing and liturgical acts merged in an expressive unity.
Keywords: Catholic Church, Borromini, oratorio, Bernini, acoustics
Sound and Architectural Space
Remains of the nineteenth-century aesthetic theory of ‘pure visibility’ (Reine Sichtbarkeit) survive in the contemporary study of architectural history, even if not explicitly evoked. Still today, scholars commonly assume that throughout history, buildings and cities were largely formed for visual aims. In turn, much of their study is based on purely visual analysis, to which ideological interpretations, based on anachronistic values, are often superimposed. As we know, an architectural or urban place is determined by extra-formal characteristics, such as the cosmic speculum highlighted by Andrews in his article, or the sanctions inflicted on violators of the rules of civitas described in De Raedt's text.
Yet, early modern architecture – as most architecture today – was built not only to be seen, but to be used, in accordance with contemporary needs. The buildings’ users had a much deeper experience of architectural space than the aestheticism of our historiography would allow. To borrow from the Latin, they were not just spectatores (viewers) but utentes (users), involved in their physical, built environment on an emotional, intellectual, and often also moral level. After all, even if only from the perceptual point of view, the use of a space is a multisensory experience that goes well beyond vision. It follows that architectural space cannot be solely measured in terms of the geometry of its constituent volumes. Rather, it is characterized by expressive values that go beyond the isotropy of pure geometry, and which in some cases deform space and even contradict it.
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- Information
- Creating Place in Early Modern European Architecture , pp. 121 - 158Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2021