ABSTRACT

Bringing together leading writers and practicing architects including Jean Dethier, David Mayernik, Massimo Scolari, Robert Adam, David Watkin and Leon Krier, this volume provides a kaleidoscopic, multilayered exploration of the Architectural Capriccio. It not only explains the phenomena within a historical context, but moreover, demonstrates its contemporary validity and appropriateness as a holistic design methodology, an inspiring pictorial strategy, an efficient rendering technique and an optimal didactic tool. The book shows and comments on a wide range of historic masterworks and highlights contemporary artists and architects excelling in a modern updated, refreshed and original tradition of the Capriccio. The capacity of the Capriccio to create an imaginary, imagined or 'analogue' reality by combining and relocating existing or invented buildings and places in uniquely suggestive drawings and paintings offers unprecedented insights in the 'Architectural Mind'. Unlike what the word Capriccio might suggest, it is not 'capricious' but indeed follows complex rules of realism and figuration, as well as coherent narratives and semantics. It is a playful reflection of the dialectics of the real and the ideal. The Capriccio does not challenge the mechanism of reality, but questions the mechanic and linear reading of the real, of life and of art and offers a large palette of threads, figures, tones and nuances to illustrate and contribute creatively to the complexity of a sustainable built and living architectural environment.

chapter |12 pages

Meaning and Purpose of the Capriccio

ByDavid Mayernik

chapter |16 pages

The Poietic Image

BySamir Younés

chapter |8 pages

The Capricci of Giovanni Paolo Panini

ByDavid Mayernik

chapter |20 pages

Patronage in the Golden Age of the Capriccio

BySelena Anders

chapter |10 pages

The Grand Tour

ByLucien Steil

chapter |8 pages

Capriccio, the Leap of the Goat or the Unexpected

ByJose Cornelio da Silva

chapter |20 pages

J.M. Gandy’s Composite Views for John Soane

ByWilliam Palin

chapter |28 pages

The Capricci of Carl Laubin

ByDavid Watkin

chapter |12 pages

Symmetria and Ethics, the Didactic Capriccio

ByDavid Ligare

chapter |10 pages

Settings: Emily Allchurch and the Old Masters

ByXavier Bray, Minna Moore Ede

chapter |8 pages

Massimo Scolari

ByLeon Krier

chapter |4 pages

Drawing

ByLeon Krier

chapter |30 pages

Capriccio

ByLeon Krier

chapter |4 pages

“Imago Luxemburgi”

ByLeon Krier

chapter |10 pages

The Capriccio and Poetical Realism

ByLucien Steil

chapter |22 pages

Urban Chiaroscuro (after Piranesi): Behind the Scenes

ByEmily Allchurch

chapter |14 pages

Sublime Architecture: Capricci in Sketchbook and Paintings

ByLucien Steil

chapter |16 pages

Le Corbusier’s Eye and the Vanishing Point of Modernity

ByDavid Brain

chapter |16 pages

The Architectural Project: An Homage to Rob Krier

ByLucien Steil

chapter |38 pages

Magical Realism in Miami

chapter |8 pages

A Very British Capriccio

chapter |18 pages

Building the Capriccio

ByRobert Adam

chapter |12 pages

Capricci Capricciosi

ByEttore Maria Mazzola

chapter |12 pages

Postface: “Techne” and Technology

ByLucien Steil