Books > Arts & Architecture > Architecture > Individual architects
|
Buy Now
Carlo Scarpa, Castelvecchio, Verona - Museo di Castelvecchio, Verona (Italian, English, Hardcover)
Loot Price: R963
Discovery Miles 9 630
You Save: R65
(6%)
|
|
Carlo Scarpa, Castelvecchio, Verona - Museo di Castelvecchio, Verona (Italian, English, Hardcover)
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
|
During the 1960s Italy's museum sector witnessed a fertile period
of renewal. A generation of architects, working in partnership with
the directors of museums, set about transforming into exhibition
spaces a number of ancient monumental complexes located in the
historic centres of some of the most important Italian cities.
Among these was the brilliant and solitary Venetian architect Carlo
Scarpa (19061978) who revitalised the discipline of museography by
sagaciously combining it with restoration. His lucid intervention
at Verona's Museo di Castelvecchio is emblematic of this approach:
the medieval castle, the museum of ancient art, and modern
architecture all harmoniously coexisting in a monument located at
the heart of a city designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site. The
far-sighted choice of Scarpa was owed to the then director of the
museum, Licisco Magagnato, who tenaciously argued the case for the
appointment of an architect specialising in this field to work on
the city's principal museum of ancient art. The renovation work,
which continued for more than a decade, took place in various
phases (19581964, 1967 and 19681974) but in accordance with a
remarkably consistent and coherent plan. In his work on
Castelvecchio, carried out at a significant point in his career,
Scarpa attained a remarkable balance between different aesthetic
elements that is particularly evident in the sculpture gallery,
where the renovations harmonise with the power of the 14th-century
Veronese sculptures exhibited in this section of the museum. One of
the most striking details is the location of the equestrian statue
of Cangrande I della Scala. For the presentation of this work the
architect conceived a backdrop of great poetry, drawing the
visitor's attention to its historical stratifications and
simultaneously creating an exemplary essay in modern architecture.
This museum is the most perfectly resolved of Scarpa's works in
terms of the complexity and coherence of its design, and today
remains "outrageously" well preserved. It is therefore unsurprising
that a photographer-artist such as Richard Bryant should have been
attracted by the extraordinary compositional, spatial and luminous
harmony of Castelvecchio. The book is introduced by an essay by
Alba Di Lieto, the architect appointed to Verona City Council's
Direzione Musei d'Arte e Monumenti, a scholar of Scarpa's drawings,
and the author of monographs on his work. She describes the
architect's renovation and locates it in the context of Italy's
architectural panorama. She also offers insights into the
cataloguing of Scarpa's graphic output in the context of the
overall conservation of his work. The essay is followed by a brief
history of the castle by Paola Marini, who was the director of
Verona's civic museum network for 22 years. The essay is followed
by a brief history of the castle by Paola Marini, who was the
director of Verona's civic museum network for 22 years. In December
2015 she has taken on a new role as director of the Gallerie
dell'Accademia in Venice the first of Scarpa's museum projects in
1949. Valeria Carullo writes in her postscript about her experience
by assisting Richard Bryant in photographing the castle. She is
curator of The Robert Elwall Photographs Collection in the RIBA
British Architectural Library. Richard Bryant is one of the
best-known architectural photographers, working all over the world.
He and Helene Binet are the only photographers with an honorary
fellowship of the Royal Institute of British Architects.
General
Is the information for this product incomplete, wrong or inappropriate?
Let us know about it.
Does this product have an incorrect or missing image?
Send us a new image.
Is this product missing categories?
Add more categories.
Review This Product
No reviews yet - be the first to create one!
|
You might also like..
|