Geometrical Objects:
Architecture and the Mathematical Sciences 1400-1800
Museum of the History of Science
and Worcester College, University of Oxford
19-20 March 2007
http://www.mhs.ox.ac.uk/architecture/
Recent scholarship in the history of science has underscored the mutually
reinforcing relationship between "high" and "low" or theoretical and
practical, forms of early modern mathematics. As many historians have shown,
mathematicians of the period were deeply involved in problems of instrument
making, surveying, engineering, gunnery, and navigation. At the same time,
the practitioners of these arts were increasingly concerned with questions
of higher mathematics and natural philosophy as they pertained to the
advancement of their craft. In fact, practitioners appear to have provided
an important intellectual and technical context for many of the period's
mathematical discoveries - an essential development, historians now
maintain, in the larger history of the "scientific revolution".
Architecture, too, was a "mathematical" art, almost wholly dependent on
geometrical or arithmetic operations of some form or another. The process
of design itself - insofar as it required the application of consistent
proportional rules - was largely defined by them, as were many other basic
tasks. Surveying, cost estimates, bookkeeping, and even the use of routine
graphic techniques - perspective, scaled orthogonal drawing, and stereotomic
diagrams - all entailed a certain amount of mathematical training. Nor were
these skills limited to the design of buildings. Architects also used
calculations in mapping cities, laying out fortifications, and planning
hydraulic projects for gardens, dams, and canals. Military and civil
engineering had long been part of the Vitruvian tradition.
This symposium seeks to explore issues and questions raised by this
situation. To what extent can the architect be considered a "mathematical
Practitioner"? What role did architectural practice and building
technologies play in the broader evolution of mathematics? How did
architects see themselves in relation to mathematicians and scientists?
What are the documented cases of contact or conflict between these groups?
Organizers
Anthony Gerbino, Worcester College, University of Oxford
Mario Carpo, École d'Architecture de ParisLa Villette
Marco Panza, CNRS and Université de Paris 7
Participants
Kirsti Andersen, The Steno Institute, History of Science Department, Aarhus
University
"The Geometry of an Art: Architects and Perspective"
Francesco Benelli, Dept of Art History and Archaeology, Columbia University
"Invisible Geometry: The Palazzo Del Podestà in Bologna"
Henk J. M. Bos, Mathematisch Institut, Universiteit Utrecht
"When Is a Curve Known? The Reaction of 17th-century Mathematicians to the
New Wealth of Hitherto Unknown Curves"
Bernard Cache, Berlage Institute, Rotterdam and Objectile, Paris
"Commensurability and Proportionality in the De Architectura"
Filippo Camerota, Istituto e Museo di Storia della Scienza, Florence
"Mathematical Sciences and Baroque Architecture: on the Villa Pamphilj,
Oblique Architecture, and Vittone¹s Newtonianism"
David Friedman, Department of Architecture, Massachussetts Institute of
Technology
"UA 4180: Survey and Urban Design in the Rome of Paul IV"
Pascal Dubourg Glatigny, Centre Alexandre Koyré, CNRS, Paris
"Architecture and Science in Rome, 1740: The St-Peter¹s Dome Collapse"
Jacques Heyman, Faculty of Engineering (Emeritus), University of Cambridge
"Geometry, Mechanics, and Analysis in Architecture"
Ann Huppert, School of Architecture, University of Kansas
"Baldassarre Peruzzi, Antonio da Sangallo the Younger, and Practical
Mathematics in Renaissance Architectural Practice"
Stephen Johnston, Museum of the History of Science, University of Oxford
"Fit for a King? Architecture, Instruments and Audience in 18th-century
England"
Jeanne Kisacky, University of Syracuse
"Breathing Room: Measuring the Immaterial Requirements of Architecture"
Susan Klaiber, Winterthur, Switzerland
"Architecture and Mathematics in Early Modern Religious Orders"
Further Enquiries
The conference is sponsored by the Graham Foundation, the Samuel H. Kress
Foundation, the Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art, Worcester
College, and the John Fell Fund of the University of Oxford. Attendance is
open to all without charge. However there is a limit on places available and
anyone wishing to attend must register with Anthony Gerbino by 1 March 2007.
He can be contacted for registration or other enquiries at: anthony.gerbino
(at) worcester.oxford.ac.uk.
---------------
Anthony Gerbino
Scott Opler Fellow
Worcester College
University of Oxford
Reference:
CONF: Architecture & Mathemat. Sciences (Oxford,19-20 Mar 07). In: ArtHist.net, Jan 4, 2007 (accessed May 13, 2025), <https://arthist.net/archive/28876>.