¶ … Sign and Symbol," by John Onians
Signs, symbols are different depending on Context and Medium:
Context = needs of builders, users
Medium -- physical dispositions of floors, walls, roofs, supports, materials
Link between physical and expressive properties -- gives signs and symbols power in architecture
In architecture, walls, doors have real and symbolic functions
Eg. A wall excludes "before it expresses exclusion" -- has real, physical effects
Wall, roof of hut -- protection; posts -- stability; doorway -- openness; threashold -- controlled access
Group of huts = social coherence
Architecture gave meaning to concepts fundamental to existence
Hut does not just communicate meaning, it constitutes meaning, it embodies meaning
Eg of symbolic architecture that is deliberate -- Dogon -- buildings located to express gender roles, and placement of head, body
Underlying awareness that response to buildings is "cognate with response to people"
Dense urban cities -- need to differentiate between classes, status, roles; expressed in different durability of materials -- also with height! -- symbol of tall building being closer to heaven -- ancient ziggurat v hut
By first millennium -- all cultures seemed to be aware of the role of architectural sign, symbol
Columns (in Egypt -- decorated to represent abundance with fronds of trees -- v- Greece with vertical lines)
Steps and podium express social status
The arch associated with heaven and conquest -- eg the triumphal arch; or semi-circular niche for a deity
Christianity -- columns becoming 12 apostles to reflect scriptural references such as Paul saying the apostles "support" the church; the arch separating nave from altar -- arch of triumph over death
New wave of Church construction -- buildings laid out according to specific numerical values with scriptural or symbolic references such as Holy Trinity, 8 Beatitudes, etc., and elevation to heaven
Paris 12-13th centuries -- new School of Paris -- Gothic emphasizing "mystical signification" more lightness in the design, less materiality
Also shift away from Roman style, which symbolized paganism
Pointed forms, evoking "convergence of branches," capitals and pinnacles with leaves, now flower symbolizes living church
15th century Italy starts to abandon Gothic architecture
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