Venice from the Water Architecture and Myth in an Early Modern City Daniel Savoy

Format:
Hardback
Publication date:
03 Jul 2012
ISBN:
9780300167979
Dimensions:
224 pages: 241 x 117 x 23mm
Illustrations:
50 colour images + 140 black & white illustrations

The floating city of Venice has enchanted visitors for centuries with its maze of scenic canals. For this pioneering book, Daniel Savoy set out by boat to explore the built environment of these waterways, gaining new insights into the architectural history of this major early modern Italian centre.

By viewing the architecture and experience of the canals in relation to the production of Venetian civic mythology, the author found that the waterways of Venice and its lagoon were integral areas of the city's pre-modern urban space, and that their flanking buildings were constructed in an intimate dialogue with the water's visual, spatial, and metaphorical properties. Enhancing the natural wonder of their aquatic setting, the builders of Venice used illusory aesthetic and scenographic practices to create waterfront buildings that appear to float, blend into the water, and glide into view around bends in the canals - transporting visitors into a seemingly otherworldly realm. This book's photographs of Venice, as seen from its waterways, will likewise transport readers with breathtaking views of this captivating city.

Daniel Savoy is an assistant professor of art history at Manhattan College.

"[A] meticulously researched, gorgeously illustrated, vigorously written history of the design of pre-modern Venice."--Norman Weinstein, "ArchNewsNow" --Norman Weinstein "ArchNewsNow "

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