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Time Matter(s): Invention and Re-Imagination in Built Conservation

Book

Time Matter(s): Invention and Re-Imagination in Built Conservation

DOI link for Time Matter(s): Invention and Re-Imagination in Built Conservation

Time Matter(s): Invention and Re-Imagination in Built Conservation book

The Unfinished Drawing and Building of St. Peter's, the Vatican

Time Matter(s): Invention and Re-Imagination in Built Conservation

DOI link for Time Matter(s): Invention and Re-Imagination in Built Conservation

Time Matter(s): Invention and Re-Imagination in Built Conservation book

The Unfinished Drawing and Building of St. Peter's, the Vatican
ByFederica Goffi
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2013
eBook Published 4 March 2016
Pub. Location London
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315550961
Pages 286
eBook ISBN 9781315550961
Subjects Built Environment, Humanities, Museum and Heritage Studies
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Goffi, F. (2013). Time Matter(s): Invention and Re-Imagination in Built Conservation: The Unfinished Drawing and Building of St. Peter's, the Vatican (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315550961

ABSTRACT

Even though the idea of altering an existing building is presently a well established practice within the context of adaptive reuse, when the building in question is a 'mnemonic building', of recognized heritage value, alterations are viewed with suspicion, even when change is a recognized necessity. This book fills in a blind spot in current architectural theory and practice, looking into a notion of conservation as a form of invention and imagination, offering the reader a counter-viewpoint to a predominant western understanding that preservation should be a 'still shot' from the past. Through a micro-historical study of a Renaissance concept of restoration, a theoretical framework to question the issue of conservation as a creative endeavor arises. It focuses on Tiberio Alfarano's 1571 ichnography of St. Peter's Basilica in the Vatican, into which a complex body of religious, political, architectural and cultural elements is woven. By merging past and present temple's plans, he created a track-drawing questioning the design pursued after Michelangelo’s death (1564), opening the gaze towards other possible future imaginings. This book uncovers how the drawing was acted on by Carlo Maderno (1556-1629), who literally used it as physical substratum to for new design proposals, completing the renewal of the temple in 1626. Proposing a hybrid architectural-conservation approach, this study shows how these two practices can be merged in contemporary renovation. By creating hybrid drawings, the retrospective and prospective gaze of built conservation forms a continuous and contiguous reality, where a pre-existent condition engages with future design rejoining multiple temporalities within continuity of identity. This study might provide a paradigmatic and timely model to retune contemporary architectural sensibility when dealing with the dilemma between design and preservation when transforming a building of recognized significance.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

chapter |18 pages

Prologue: Notes on the Ontology of Remaking Mnemic Buildings

chapter |28 pages

Day 1 Introduction to a Micro-historical Study of the Renovation of St. Peter’s Basilica in the Vatican (1506–1626)

chapter |22 pages

Day 2 Architecture’s Twinned Body: Building and Drawing

chapter |28 pages

Day 3 ‘Hallowed Configuration’: The Mediating Role of Architectural Representation in Built Conservation

chapter |34 pages

Day 4 Stratigraphic Drawings and the Drawings of Members: Assembling the Exquisite Corpse

chapter |28 pages

Day 5 Restoring the Corporate Body: Heteroglossia versus Unity of Style

chapter |20 pages

Day 6 Framing the Icon: Skin-Deep Conservation versus the Imagination of Built Conservation

chapter |30 pages

Day 7 Time Matter(s): The Sempiternal Nature of Built Conservation

chapter |18 pages

Conclusion: The Role of Ambiguity and the Unfinished in Defining Built Conservation

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