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Perception. The Representation of Space, from Bidimensionality to Tridimensionality
The need of representing the space of our community life has manifested itself over time through different forms, which have had as its object the reality in its various patterns. This long journey, documented as early as the Neolithic, continued almost unchanged until the introduction of the geometric perspective, better theorized in the fifteenth century. New formulations opened, which had their maximum application in the artistic disciplines, reaching the threshold of the twentieth century with the complete “destruction” of the traditional relationship between form and content in the abstract image. From the end of the nineteenth century, studies were addressed to a continuous space, no longer divided into rigid schemes, corresponding to the need for an increased social communication between individuals. Also in the light of the scientific acquisitions of recent decades, the chapter proposes a historical and theoretical reconstruction of the process that brought human thought from topology to three-dimensionality, towards a greater awareness of the geometries and physicality of a habitable and visible place, to ascertain the relationships that can exist between surfaces and spaces, even in everyday life.
Perception. The Representation of Space, from Bidimensionality to Tridimensionality
The need of representing the space of our community life has manifested itself over time through different forms, which have had as its object the reality in its various patterns. This long journey, documented as early as the Neolithic, continued almost unchanged until the introduction of the geometric perspective, better theorized in the fifteenth century. New formulations opened, which had their maximum application in the artistic disciplines, reaching the threshold of the twentieth century with the complete “destruction” of the traditional relationship between form and content in the abstract image. From the end of the nineteenth century, studies were addressed to a continuous space, no longer divided into rigid schemes, corresponding to the need for an increased social communication between individuals. Also in the light of the scientific acquisitions of recent decades, the chapter proposes a historical and theoretical reconstruction of the process that brought human thought from topology to three-dimensionality, towards a greater awareness of the geometries and physicality of a habitable and visible place, to ascertain the relationships that can exist between surfaces and spaces, even in everyday life.
Perception. The Representation of Space, from Bidimensionality to Tridimensionality
Springer ser. in des. and Innovation
Anzani, Anna (editor) / Guglielmi, E. (author)
2020-05-13
19 pages
Article/Chapter (Book)
Electronic Resource
English
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