ABSTRACT

This book offers original interdisciplinary insights into cities as a diachronic creation of urban art. It engages in a sequence of historical perspectives to examine urban space as an object of apparent quasi-cycles and processes of constitution, exaltation, imitation, contestation and redemption through art. 

Urban art transforms the city into a human-made sublime which is explored in the context of the Eastern Mediterranean. The book probes this process primarily through the example of Athens and Byzantine Constantinople, but also Jerusalem, Cyprus and regional cities, revealing how urban space unavoidably encompasses a spatial and temporal palimpsest which is constantly emerging. It presents new ideas for both the theorization and sensuous conception of artistic reality, architecture, and planning attributes. These extend from archaic, classical and Byzantine urban splendour to current urban decline as constitution and attack on the sublime and back. Urban processes of contestation and redemption respond recently to the new ‘imperialism of debt’ and the positivist, technocratic understandings and demands of Euro-governments and neoliberal institutions, while still evoking older forms of spatial power.

Offering fresh notions on art, architecture, space, antiquity, (post)-modernity and politics of the region, this book will appeal to scholars and students of geography, urban studies, art, restoration, and film theory, architecture, landscape design, planning, anthropology, sociology and history.

chapter |23 pages

Introduction

Urban art between archetypal sublimity and ultramodern insurgency

part 1|35 pages

Creating, imitating, and destroying the urban sublime and its materiality

chapter 2|19 pages

Assaulting the archetypes

Urban materiality and the current adulation and hatred for marble in Athens

part 2|59 pages

The artistic sublime of the Byzantine Cosmopolis

chapter 3|15 pages

On real and imaginary cities

Textual and visual representation of cities and the perception of urban space in the Byzantine world

chapter 4|14 pages

Art and urban planning as identity and reflection of the great city

(Constantinople) and the sacred polis (Jerusalem) in the Byzantine provinces: the case of Cyprus

chapter 6|15 pages

Between convention and reality

Visual approaches to cities in post-Byzantine icon painting

part 3|45 pages

Current crisis and urban insurgency as contestation of the urban sublime

chapter 8|15 pages

Athens, invisible city of the 21st century

From Olympic illusions to crisis and its contestation by the urban grassroots

chapter 9|17 pages

Bodies in the city

Athenian street art and the biopolitics of the ‘Greek Crisis’

part 4|70 pages

(Re)-constituting the sublime image of the city

chapter 10|13 pages

Urban gardening as a collective participatory art

Landscape and political qualities related to the concept of the ‘sublime’

chapter 11|15 pages

‘Trikoupis Refuses to Unveil Himself in Order Not to See.’

A memorial statue and national identity in early 20th-century Greece

chapter 12|9 pages

Dialogues with modernity in the city of Ioannina

Aris Konstantinidis, Natalia Mela, Michael Kanakis, and Paris Prekas

chapter 13|14 pages

Painting versions of the Athenian landscape

Spyros Vassiliou and Yiannis Adamakis

chapter 14|13 pages

The mythical landscape of Andrei Tarkovsky

Notes on the interpretation of cinematic space in Stalker

chapter |4 pages

Concluding thoughts