Building-in-time from Giotto to Alberti and modern oblivion

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August 6, 2025 | History

Building-in-time from Giotto to Alberti and modern oblivion

In the pre-modern age in Europe, the architect built not merely with imagination, bricks and mortar, but with time, using vast quantities of duration as the means to erect monumental buildings that otherwise would have been impossible to achieve. Virtually all the great cathedrals of France and the rest of Europe were built by this deliberate practice, here given the name "Building-in-Time". It places an entirely new light on the major works of pre-modern Italy, from the Pisa cathedral group to the cathedrals of Milan, Venice and Siena, and from the monuments of fourteenth-century Florence to the new St Peter's. Even as this temporal regime was flourishing, the fifteenth-century Italian architect Leon Battista Alberti proposed a new one for architecture, in which time would ideally be excluded from the making of architecture ("Building-outside-Time"). Planning and building, which had always formed one fluid, imbricated process, were to be sharply divided, and the change that always came with time was to be excluded from architectural making.

Publish Date
Language
English
Pages
490

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Book Details


Table of Contents

In modern oblivion: rethinking architecture, time, and history
Regimes of time consciousness in architectural lifeworlds
Premodern regimes of architecture and time: theory
Building-in-time in "pre-Albertian" Italy: theory
The art of building in time: Florentine practice
Reflexions of practice
Cohabiting temporalities of practice in Brunelleschi
Alberti and Brunelleschi
Renaissance temporalities after Alberti
Afterword: crypto-Albertianism and the oblivion of building-in-time.

Edition Notes

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Published in
New Haven

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
720.1/08
Library of Congress
NA1114 .T72 2010, NA1114.T72 2010

The Physical Object

Pagination
p. cm.
Number of pages
490

Edition Identifiers

Open Library
OL24003034M
Internet Archive
buildingintimefr0000trac
ISBN 13
9780300165920
LCCN
2009054057
OCLC/WorldCat
472423833

Work Identifiers

Work ID
OL18762343W

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