1497-1516_ITRI.pdf

The volume, dedicated to the 44th International Conference of the Italian Union for Drawing, investigates the theme of ‘Transitions’, which particularly effectively represents our time and the current condition of the discipline of Drawing. The term, beyond its generic meaning of an intermediate sta...

Πλήρης περιγραφή

Λεπτομέρειες βιβλιογραφικής εγγραφής
Γλώσσα:Italian
English
spa
Έκδοση: FrancoAngeli 2024
Διαθέσιμο Online:https://series.francoangeli.it/index.php/oa/catalog/book/1016
id oapen-20.500.12657-86698
record_format dspace
institution OAPEN
collection DSpace
language Italian
English
spa
description The volume, dedicated to the 44th International Conference of the Italian Union for Drawing, investigates the theme of ‘Transitions’, which particularly effectively represents our time and the current condition of the discipline of Drawing. The term, beyond its generic meaning of an intermediate stage in a process in which a condition changes from one state to another, has always been used in various fields, from music to geophysics. In fact, the disciplines of drawing have always been confronted with themes and issues relating to transitions from one condition to another. The history of representation tells us of transformations, even epochal ones, relating to ‘drawing’, with all that such transitions entail: suffice it to think of the evolution of forms of representation, of instrumental apparatuses, of the mutability of supports, of the analogical-digital transition underway, of the new modes of communication on platforms, of the hypertrophic offer of images also on the net that confirms Guy Debord’s intuitions relating to the new spectacularisation of society. Similarly, representation triggers transitions in the prefiguration and communication of design, the anticipation and foreshadowing of future events.The challenges posed by the digital pose open questions whose scope can only be glimpsed, such as the relationship between drawing and the act of modelling, and the construction of new paradigms of visual language and communication. ‘Transitions’, almost implicitly, points to possible futures, the evolution of technique and the search for new modes of expression; at the same time, however, it can suggest silences and reflections in a process of connection between history, theory, criticism and construction.
title 1497-1516_ITRI.pdf
spellingShingle 1497-1516_ITRI.pdf
title_short 1497-1516_ITRI.pdf
title_full 1497-1516_ITRI.pdf
title_fullStr 1497-1516_ITRI.pdf
title_full_unstemmed 1497-1516_ITRI.pdf
title_sort 1497-1516_itri.pdf
publisher FrancoAngeli
publishDate 2024
url https://series.francoangeli.it/index.php/oa/catalog/book/1016
_version_ 1799945240981798912
spelling oapen-20.500.12657-866982024-01-12T02:39:10Z Chapter Documentazione del patrimonio architettonico: il rilievo della chiesa di San Menna a Sant’Agata de’ Goti (BN) Itri, Federica Transitions Cross Modulate Develop Drawing Science of Representation bic Book Industry Communication::A The arts::AM Architecture::AMC Architectural structure & design bic Book Industry Communication::T Technology, engineering, agriculture::TB Technology: general issues::TBG Engineering graphics & technical drawing bic Book Industry Communication::A The arts::AG Art treatments & subjects::AGZ Art techniques & principles The volume, dedicated to the 44th International Conference of the Italian Union for Drawing, investigates the theme of ‘Transitions’, which particularly effectively represents our time and the current condition of the discipline of Drawing. The term, beyond its generic meaning of an intermediate stage in a process in which a condition changes from one state to another, has always been used in various fields, from music to geophysics. In fact, the disciplines of drawing have always been confronted with themes and issues relating to transitions from one condition to another. The history of representation tells us of transformations, even epochal ones, relating to ‘drawing’, with all that such transitions entail: suffice it to think of the evolution of forms of representation, of instrumental apparatuses, of the mutability of supports, of the analogical-digital transition underway, of the new modes of communication on platforms, of the hypertrophic offer of images also on the net that confirms Guy Debord’s intuitions relating to the new spectacularisation of society. Similarly, representation triggers transitions in the prefiguration and communication of design, the anticipation and foreshadowing of future events.The challenges posed by the digital pose open questions whose scope can only be glimpsed, such as the relationship between drawing and the act of modelling, and the construction of new paradigms of visual language and communication. ‘Transitions’, almost implicitly, points to possible futures, the evolution of technique and the search for new modes of expression; at the same time, however, it can suggest silences and reflections in a process of connection between history, theory, criticism and construction. 2024-01-11T15:39:53Z 2024-01-11T15:39:53Z 2023 chapter ONIX_20240111_9788835155119_87 9788835155119 https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/86698 ita eng spa diségno application/pdf Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International 1497-1516_ITRI.pdf https://series.francoangeli.it/index.php/oa/catalog/book/1016 FrancoAngeli Transizioni = Transitions 10.3280/oa-1016-c361 The volume, dedicated to the 44th International Conference of the Italian Union for Drawing, investigates the theme of ‘Transitions’, which particularly effectively represents our time and the current condition of the discipline of Drawing. The term, beyond its generic meaning of an intermediate stage in a process in which a condition changes from one state to another, has always been used in various fields, from music to geophysics. In fact, the disciplines of drawing have always been confronted with themes and issues relating to transitions from one condition to another. The history of representation tells us of transformations, even epochal ones, relating to ‘drawing’, with all that such transitions entail: suffice it to think of the evolution of forms of representation, of instrumental apparatuses, of the mutability of supports, of the analogical-digital transition underway, of the new modes of communication on platforms, of the hypertrophic offer of images also on the net that confirms Guy Debord’s intuitions relating to the new spectacularisation of society. Similarly, representation triggers transitions in the prefiguration and communication of design, the anticipation and foreshadowing of future events.The challenges posed by the digital pose open questions whose scope can only be glimpsed, such as the relationship between drawing and the act of modelling, and the construction of new paradigms of visual language and communication. ‘Transitions’, almost implicitly, points to possible futures, the evolution of technique and the search for new modes of expression; at the same time, however, it can suggest silences and reflections in a process of connection between history, theory, criticism and construction. 10.3280/oa-1016-c361 e2ddfb5e-9202-4851-8afe-1e09b020b018 b51f7945-d27d-4941-b230-9b49a7d6f5cc 9788835155119 19 Milan open access