Perspective Before Perspective: The Spaces
of Medieval Geometry |
Anthony Scibilia University of Illinois
2, Avenue de Paris
78000 Versailles FRANCE
The geometric figure of similar
triangles fundamental to the theorization and execution of images
according to a system of one-point perspective in fifteenth-century
Tuscany appears in a vast majority of later medieval basilican
churches in Europe, beginning as early as the eleventh century.
This figure appears in plan, but is palpable to the ambulatory
observer in a series of axial alignments of pier/column edges
located near the observer with pier/column/wall respond bodies
further away. Though such alignments may be found in pre-eleventh-century
architecture in Europe and beyond, it is only from the eleventh
century on in Europe that these similar triangles are consistently
lodged in the building's enclosing walls, a trait that links
the perspectival spaces of such buildings with the phenomenon
of the framed perspective painting and bas-relief, the triptych
in particular.
Similar triangles
in the architecture of Brunelleschi: a) towards
a vanishing point ; b) towards an observer; c) towards an observer
The triptychal and perspective structure of these interiors
is echoed in the overtly perspectival elaboration of the layered
portal. As a radically compressed version of the church interior,
the layered portal stands between the extensive and sprawling
perspective space of architecture, and the collapse of such space
into the flat painted panel.
The perspectival traits of later medieval basilican church
interiors and portals differ throughout Europe, but two spatial
types - one Tuscan, one northern - emerge, and display striking
correspondence with the spatial and temporal structure of later
Tuscan and northern painted perspective.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Anthony Scibilia is a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Art History
and Archaeology at Columbia University in the City of New York,
where he has earned M.A. and M. Phil. degrees, and taught for
several years. In a doctoral dissertation titled "Perspective
Before Perspective: The Spaces of Medieval Architecture,"
Mr. Scibilia shows that the spatial properties of fifteenth century
perspective are anticipated in the design of medieval basilican
churches dating from as early as the 11th century. Mr. Scibilia,
who loves teaching, began to lecture as an undergraduate; prior
to entering graduate school he had already spoken at several
universities, colleges and seminars in the United States and
abroad on the music and acoustics of Romanesque and Gothic churches,
a thesis topic that earned him honors at Cornell University.
As an architectural photographer, Mr. Scibilia has travelled
extensively throughout Europe and the United States, and produced
more than 10,000 images. His photographs have been published
widely, and his work may be found in the libraries of
many of the major universities, colleges, and museums in the
United States. While still in high school, Mr. Scibilia was accepted
to the Eastman School of Music, where he studied piano. After
leaving Columbia, he plans to return to the piano, and attend
the New England Conservatory of Music, where he has been invited
by pianist Russell Sherman to teach on topics of visual art,
music, and poetry.
The correct citation
for this article is: Anthony Scibilia, "Perspective
Before Perspective", pp. 223-235 in Nexus IV: Architecture
and Mathematics, eds. Kim Williams and Jose Francisco Rodrigues,
Fucecchio (Florence): Kim Williams Books, 2002. http://www.nexusjournal.com/conferences/N2002-Scibilia.html |
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