ABSTRACT

Historically the urban festival served as an occasion for affirming shared convictions and identities in the life of the city. Whether religious or civic in nature, these events provided tangible expressions of social, cultural, political, and religious cohesion, often reaffirming a particular shared ethos within diverse urban landscapes. Architecture has long served as a key aspect of this process exhibiting continuity in the flux of these representations through the parading of elaborate ceremonial floats, the construction of temporary buildings, the ‘dressing’ of existing urban space, the alternative occupations of the everyday, and the construction of new buildings and spaces which then become a part of the background fabric of the city.

This book examines how festivals can be used as a lens to examine the relationship between city and citizen and questions whether this is fixed through time, or has been transformed as a response to changes in the modern urban condition. Architecture, Festival and the City looks at the multilayered nature of a diverse selection of festivals and the way they incorporate both orderly (authoritative) and disorderly (subversive) components. The aim is to reveal how the civic nature of urban space is utilised through festival to represent ideas of belonging and identity. Recent political and social gatherings also raise questions about the relationship of these events to ‘ritual’ and whether traditional practices can serve as meaningful references in the twenty-first century.

chapter |13 pages

Introduction: Festive architectures

Agon, liminality, and representation

part |64 pages

The festival in history

chapter Chapter 1|18 pages

Pruning and propagating civic behaviour

Three feste in and around Santa Maria della Vittoria in Mantua, 1495–97 – Italy

chapter Chapter 3|14 pages

Festa della Chinea

Tradition and the ‘exotic’ in Roman festival design – Italy

chapter Chapter 4|16 pages

Honneurs et applaudissements

Celebrating the first Jesuit saints in seventeenth-century France

part |78 pages

The festival through history

chapter Chapter 5|16 pages

Script and score

Revisiting Nelson Goodman at Sanja Matsuri – Japan

chapter Chapter 6|16 pages

The Calcio Storico in Florence

Agonistic ritual and the space of civic order – Italy

chapter Chapter 8|11 pages

The town of witches

Triora transfixed – Italy

part |87 pages

Meaning in the modern festival

chapter Chapter 10|13 pages

A better life for more people

Jaqueline Tyrwhitt’s contribution to the festival of Britain – UK

chapter Chapter 11|17 pages

A vigorous corrective

The Ulster ’71 festival in Northern Ireland, UK

chapter Chapter 12|12 pages

The Pope, the park, and the city

Dublin, 1979, Republic of Ireland

chapter Chapter 13|16 pages

Urban fabric

Maria Lai and Ulassai, Sardinia 1981

chapter Chapter 14|13 pages

The social architecture of contemporary cultural festivals

Connecting people, the environment, and art in the Setouchi Triennale – Japan

chapter Chapter 15|14 pages

Tahrir Square’s festive imagination – Egypt