History of Architecture : Renaissance to the present

lbarc1240  2020-2021  Bruxelles

History of Architecture : Renaissance to the present
Due to the COVID-19 crisis, the information below is subject to change, in particular that concerning the teaching mode (presential, distance or in a comodal or hybrid format).
3 credits
30.0 h
Q1
Teacher(s)
Lampariello Beatrice;
Language
French
Main themes
Further exploration of the theological, ideological and theoretical stances which inform works from
Modern times and the contemporary period
  • Renaissance: measurements of space, proportions, representation
  • Baroque and Rococo: structural deformation, staging of transcendence
  • 18th century: return of Classicism, importance of reason
  • 19th century: industrialisation and architecture, between historicism and rationalism
  • 20th century: technical progress and/or social revolution? Modernity and modernism
  • Today: the end of certainty: architecture as a local issue confronted with a global challenge
Aims

At the end of this learning unit, the student is able to :

1 The History of Architecture teaching unit is designed to provide a set of references. It will however avoid considering history as merely a reservoir of examples, but attempt to analyse 'historically', i.e. to put these examples in their context to gain better understanding of their complex meaning.  

The main objective of the unit is to ask questions and attempt to understand architecture, as a complex phenomenon, of an intellectual, physical and social kind, and its meaning. This will be done by taking a strictly historical approach.
Specific learning outcomes:
By the end of this course, students are able to
understand and use the vocabulary of art, architecture and urbanism
  • identify and name the main (typical) stylistic characteristics of an artistic, architectural or urbanistic work in the period being studied
  • logically place, in time and space, architecture and town developments representative of the period being studied
  • explain the meaning of a work by putting it back in context, namely by understanding the whys and wherefores which shaped it
  • place unfamiliar examples by referring them to familiar models
  • convey the link between art history and the political, economic and social organisation of society.
Contribution to the learning outcome reference framework:
Build knowledge of architecture
  • Be familiar with and analyse the basic references
  • Be able to use given references which, by analogy, can lead to other interpretations of the context
  • Develop and make use of knowledge in the discipline
Place the action
  • Analyse the environments and contexts according to various given methods and starting from various identified points of view
Make use of other subjects
  • Make use of other subjects to ask questions about the design and implementation of an architectural project
Use the technical dimension
  • Observe and assess the main construction principles of a building
Express an architectural procedure
  • Convey the experience of spatiality by observing it and posing questions
  • Express ideas clearly in oral, graphic and written form
 
Bibliography
G. Fanelli, R. Gargiani, Histoire de l’architecture moderne, PPUR, Lausanne 2008
Et un livre à choix parmi les suivants :
H. Saalman, Filippo Brunelleschi: The buildings, Zwemmer, London 1993
J. Ackerman, Palladio, Macula, Paris 1981
A. Blunt, Borromini, Harvard University Press, Cambridge 1979
J.-M. Perouse de Montclos, Étienne-Louis Boullée : 1728-1799. De l’architecture classique à l’architecture révolutionnaire, Arts et Métiers Graphiques, Paris 1969
Faculty or entity
LOCI


Programmes / formations proposant cette unité d'enseignement (UE)

Title of the programme
Sigle
Credits
Prerequisites
Aims
Bachelor in Architecture (Bruxelles)