{"title":"The Alphabet of Architecture. Originality and Literacy in the Theory of Profiles","authors":"M. Delbeke","doi":"10.15581/014.24.34-45","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"In 1691 Augustin-Charles D’Aviler published his Cours d’architecture qui comprend les ordres de Vignole. Ostensibly one of the many extended editions of Vignola’s Regola delli cinque ordini d’architettura (1562) that would appear over the course of the 16th and 17th century, D’Aviler’s Cours is in fact an expansive and not always systematic compendium on design and construction, covering subjects ranging from the design of locks to the layout of the princely residence. Still, the Cours opens with a short biography of Vignola and is dedicated for its first part to the five orders discussed by the Italian architect. But before D’Aviler dives into the proportions of the Tuscan order, the first and lowest of the five, he treats an altogether different subject: mouldings. Over three sections D’Aviler develops a small design theory of the subject: “des moulures, et de la manière de les bien profiler”, “des ornemens des moulures” and “du choix des profiles”. \nA closer look at these sections will show how D’Aviler deals with concerns and anxieties related to the two foundational creative acts of classicism: imitation and invention. The moulding is an architectural element that allows D’Aviler to explore the tension between these two creative acts, thanks to its intricate composition and its capacity to articulate the surface of a building. He does so in the pages of a printed treatise. This medium frames the matters of imitation and invention in terms of literacy and replication. D’Aviler constructs in words and image a vocabulary that allows for the reproduction of the principles he proposes. Thanks to the medium of the treatise, these principles can be taught and reproduced, an effect most apparent in the considerable afterlife of his theory of mouldings. ","PeriodicalId":53960,"journal":{"name":"Ra-Revista de Arquitectura","volume":"56 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.4000,"publicationDate":"2022-12-12","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Ra-Revista de Arquitectura","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.15581/014.24.34-45","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"艺术学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"ARCHITECTURE","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
In 1691 Augustin-Charles D’Aviler published his Cours d’architecture qui comprend les ordres de Vignole. Ostensibly one of the many extended editions of Vignola’s Regola delli cinque ordini d’architettura (1562) that would appear over the course of the 16th and 17th century, D’Aviler’s Cours is in fact an expansive and not always systematic compendium on design and construction, covering subjects ranging from the design of locks to the layout of the princely residence. Still, the Cours opens with a short biography of Vignola and is dedicated for its first part to the five orders discussed by the Italian architect. But before D’Aviler dives into the proportions of the Tuscan order, the first and lowest of the five, he treats an altogether different subject: mouldings. Over three sections D’Aviler develops a small design theory of the subject: “des moulures, et de la manière de les bien profiler”, “des ornemens des moulures” and “du choix des profiles”.
A closer look at these sections will show how D’Aviler deals with concerns and anxieties related to the two foundational creative acts of classicism: imitation and invention. The moulding is an architectural element that allows D’Aviler to explore the tension between these two creative acts, thanks to its intricate composition and its capacity to articulate the surface of a building. He does so in the pages of a printed treatise. This medium frames the matters of imitation and invention in terms of literacy and replication. D’Aviler constructs in words and image a vocabulary that allows for the reproduction of the principles he proposes. Thanks to the medium of the treatise, these principles can be taught and reproduced, an effect most apparent in the considerable afterlife of his theory of mouldings.
1691年,奥古斯丁·查尔斯·达维勒出版了他的《维格诺尔建筑教程》。表面上看,《达维勒的课程》是16世纪和17世纪出现的Vignola的《Regola delli cinque ordini d’architettura》(1562)的众多扩展版之一,实际上是一本关于设计和建筑的广泛而不总是系统的纲要,涵盖了从锁的设计到王室住宅的布局等主题。尽管如此,这本书还是以维尼奥拉的简短传记开篇,并在第一部分中专门介绍了这位意大利建筑师讨论过的五个订单。但在达维勒深入研究托斯卡纳订单的比例之前,他处理了一个完全不同的主题:造型。托斯卡纳订单是五种订单中排名第一和最低的。在三个章节中,达维勒发展了一个关于这个主题的小设计理论:“des moulures, et de la maniires de les bien profiler”,“des ornemens des moulures”和“du choice des profiles”。仔细看一下这些章节,就会发现达维勒是如何处理与古典主义的两种基本创作行为:模仿和发明有关的担忧和焦虑的。造型是一种建筑元素,使D 'Aviler能够探索这两种创造性行为之间的紧张关系,这要归功于其复杂的构图和表达建筑表面的能力。他在一篇印刷的论文中这样做了。这种媒介将模仿和发明的问题框定在识字和复制方面。D 'Aviler在文字和图像中构建了一个词汇表,允许他提出的原则的复制。由于论文的媒介,这些原则可以被教授和复制,在他的模塑理论的相当可观的来世最明显的影响。