Modern times and the contemporary period
- Renaissance: measurements of space, proportions, representation
- Baroque and Rococo: structural deformation, staging of transcendence
- 18th century: return of Classicism, importance of reason
- 19th century: industrialisation and architecture, between historicism and rationalism
- 20th century: technical progress and/or social revolution? Modernity and modernism
- Today: the end of certainty: architecture as a local issue confronted with a global challenge
At the end of this learning unit, the student is able to : | |
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The History of Architecture teaching unit is designed to provide a set of references. It will however avoid considering history as merely a reservoir of examples, but attempt to analyse ¿historically¿, i.e. to put these examples in their context to gain better understanding of their complex meaning. Specific learning outcomes: By the end of this course, students are able to
Contribution to the learning outcome reference framework: Build knowledge of architecture
Place the action
Make use of other subjects
Use the technical dimension
Express an architectural procedure
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The contribution of this Teaching Unit to the development and command of the skills and learning outcomes of the programme(s) can be accessed at the end of this sheet, in the section entitled “Programmes/courses offering this Teaching Unit”.
- Von MEISS (P.), De la forme au lieu. Une introduction à l'étude de l'architecture, Lausanne, 1993.
- TARICAT (J.), Histoires d'architecture, [Parenthèses], 2004 .
- NORBERG-SCHULZ (Ch.), La signification dans l'architecture occidentale, Bruxelles-Liège, 1977.
- CHEYNUT (J.) et LEFEVRE (P), Parcours d'architectes, Paris, [Le Cavalier Bleu], 2012.
- DONNADIEU (B.), L'apprentissage du regard. Leçons d'architecture de Dominique Spinetta, Paris, 2002.