Monday, October 21, 2019
review sheet Essays
review sheet Essays review sheet Essay review sheet Essay M. J. Jarzombek and V. Prakash, A Global History of Architecture, 2nd ed. , New Jersey: John Wiley Sons, 2011. Moffett, Marian, Michael Fazio and Lawrence Wodehouse, Buildings Across Time, an Introduction to World Architecture, London: Laurence King Publishing, 2004. Trachtenberg, Marvin and Isabelle Hyman, Architecture from Prehistory to Postmodernism: The Western Tradition, 2nd ed. , New York and Englewood Cliffs, 2002. Ingersoll, Richard and Spiro Kostof, World Architecture: A Cross-cultural History, New York and Oxford, 2012. Nuttgens, Patrick, The Story of Architecture, 2nd ed. , London: Phaidon Press, 1997. Sutton, Ian, Western Architecture: From Ancient Greece to the Present, London: Thames and Hudson, 1999. Relevant readings from these texts are indicated in the detailed course syllabus. A glossary of architectural terminology is available at the end of Ingersolls book (pp. 957-964, Chings book (pp. 799-807), Moffetts book (pp. 68-571), and Trachtenbergs book (pp. 83-589). Bibliographies are organized chronologically at the end of Ching (pp. 809-818), Moffett (pp. 572-575), Trachtenberg (pp. 591-601), and at the end of each section of Ingersolls book. EXAMS: There will be three hour-exams on the following dates: First Hour-Exam: Monday, September 30, 10:00 am Second Hour-Exam: Monday, November 4, 10:00 am Third Hour-Exam: Monday , December 16, 1 1 am ASSIGNMENTS: discussion sections: October 24/25 November 21/22 These writing assignments will be linked to specific assigned readings and are intended to address reading comprehension skills. The readings will be available at east one week in advance and you will be required, in your discussion section, to respond to specific questions about the content and the authors arguments. Your responses will be written during your discussion section in blank Blue Books; all responses must be handed in at the end of the class. IMAGES: Powerpoint images shown in lectures will be accessible on Blackboard Learn, organized by lecture. Each student registered for the course will also be registered on Blackboard Learn. GRADING for students enrolled ARCH 2350: First Hour-Exam Second Hour-Exam Third Hour-Exam Writing Assignments x 2 @ 15% each Attendance, professionalism and class participation in discussion sections GRADING for students enrolled ARCH 6340: First Hour Exam Second Hour Exam Third Hour Exam Essays x 2 @ 15% each Short paper (1000 words), topic, due date tba GENERAL INFORMATION Prerequisite for students enrolled in ARCH 2350: English 1304, 1310 or its equivalent, completed or being taken concurrently. The content of the discussion sections (labs) will include discussion and clarification of the weekly lectures, specifically with the intent of understanding how architectural history can be relevant to the present, especially to contemporary rchitectural design. Attendance will be taken at each session and students are expected to participate in discussions. In order to perform well in this course, you must regularly attend both the lectures and the discussion sections. The material covered on the hour exams derives directly Make-up exams and make-up essays will be given only with a legitimate doctors note, police report or court order. There will be no make-up for the third hour exam. Plagiarism, defined as the appropriation or imitation of the language, ideas, or thoughts of another author, and representation of them as ones original work, will NOT be tolerated. Penalties may include a failing grade in the course, suspension, or expulsion from the university. The last day to drop the course with a grade of MT is Friday, November 1, 5:00pm. The university will NOT allow any withdrawals after this date. The University of Houston System complies with Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 and the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, pertaining to the provision of reasonable academic adjustments/auxiliary aids for students with a disability. In accordance with Section 504 and ADA guidelines, each University within the System trives to provide reasonable academic adjustments/auxiliary aids to students who request and require them. If you believe that you have a disability requiring an academic adjustments/auxiliary aid, please contact the student disability services center at 713-743-5400. Schedule of Lectures Monday, August 26 Introduction and overview of the course Wednesday, August 28 Prehistoric Architecture-Late New Stone Age Monday, September 2 NO CLASS: Labor Day Holiday Wednesday, September 4 Egypt: Old and New Kingdoms Monday, September 9 Pre-Columbian Meso-America Wednesday, September 1 1 Buddhist and Hindu Sanctuaries in India and Cambodia Monday, September 16 Architecture and Culture of China Wednesday, September 18Architecture and Culture of Japan Monday, September 23 Greece: Site Planning: the Acropolis and the Agora Wednesday, September 25Greece: the Architecture of Temples Monday, September 30 First Hour-Exam Wednesday, October 2 Introduction The Roman Civic Presence l: Forum, Basilica Monday, October 7 The Roman Civic Presence II: Market, Theater and Amphitheater Wednesday, October 9 The Roman Civic Presence Ill: Gate, Arch, Aqueduct Monday, October 14 The Roman Religious Presence: Temple and Tomb Wednesday, October 16The Roman Residence: Villa and House Monday, October 21 Early Christian and Byzantine Architecture Wednesday, October 23 Architecture of the Islamic World: the Mosque Monday, October 28 Romanesque Architecture: Pilgrimage Churches and Cistercian Monasteries Monday, November 4 Second Hour-Exam Wednesday, November 6 Introduction to the Renaissance The Work of Brunelleschi Monday, November 1 1 The Work of Alberti and Bramante Wednesday, November 13 The Work of Michelangelo and Palladio Monday, November 18 Renaissance France: the Architecture of the Chateau Wednesday, November 20 Baroque Italy: the work of Bernini and Borromini Monday, November 25 Baroque nd Rococo in Austria and Germany Wednesday, November 27 NO CLASS: Thanksgiving Holiday Monday, December 2 France in the 17th Century 16th and 17th-Century Landscape Design Wednesday, December 4 England in the 17th Century Monday, December 16 Third Hour-Exam 11:00 am ARCH 2350/6340 Prehistoric Architecture Late New Stone Age (Neolithic) 3000-1000 BCE Suggested Reading: I ngersoll, pp. 23-32; Trachtenberg, pp. 57-61; Nuttgens, pp. 10-15; Ching, pp. 23-24, 47-51; Moffett, pp. 9-14. France, Carnac (in the region of Brittany) and England, Avebury, menhirs (megaliths literally, large stones] or monolithic upright stone markers), dolmens (two menhirs supporting a horizontal block, usually used for marking tombs (substructure of a barrow), post and lintel structural system), ca. 2000-1500 BCE. England, Stonehenge (near Salisbury), composed stone group based on a circular plan (henge monument), ca. 2750-1500 BCE, post and lintel structural system, mortise and tenon Joints; optical refinements: tapered pillars, inclining lintels. France, Gordes (in the region of Provence), The Bories, reconstructed prehistoric village; domestic architecture built up with relatively thin stone slabs, use of orbeling technique, ca. 2000 BCE. trilith [literally three stones] entry portals, (combination of corbeled construction with post and lintel construction). University of Houston Egypt: Old and New Kingdoms Suggested Reading: Ingersoll, pp. 48-60, 86-97; Trachtenberg, pp. 62-71; Nuttgens, pp. 28-41; Ching, pp. 39-45, 64-73; Moffett, pp. 23-37. Important Historical Information: ca. 3200-2160 BCE Old Kingdom ca. 1570-1100 BCE New Kingdom Old Kingdom Saqqara, Mortuary Complex of King Zoser, ca. 2650 BCE mastaba (bench in Arabic; bench-like quadrangular form); architect Imhotep. Giza, complex of Great pyramids, 2580-2500 BCE Cheops (Khufu), Chepren (Khafa) and Mycerinus (Menkure) Predetermined architectural procession: river, Valley Temple, causeway, Mortuary Temple, tomb. New Kingdom Deir el Bahari, Mortuary Temple of Queen Hatshepsut, ca. 1500 BCE architect: Senmut; dedicated to the sun god Amon-Ra; Proto Doric colonnades. Pre-Columbian Meso-America Suggested Reading: Ingersoll, pp. 83-190, 251-263; Nuttgens, Ch. 6; Ching, pp. 225-27, 432-34; Moffett, pp. 283-293. City of Teotihuacan, 150-650 CE, (when it was burned), located in the Valley of Mexico, ca 40 miles northeast of Mexico City: Pyramid of the Moon?talud/tablero profile; pen plaza in front of Pyramid of the Moon; Pyramid of the Sun; Citadel with Temple of the Feathe red Serpent; open compound: probably marketplace and administrative center; Street of the Dead. City of Chichen Itza, (Yucatan Peninsula), ca. 750-1200 CE: open plaza cont. pyramid, known as Castillo, Temple of Warriors to east, surrounded by rows of columns that create second open plaza, ritual Ball Court opposite, to west. Very north end of site occupied by sink well (place of sacrifice); city extends also toward south, w/ palaces and other temples (Red House) a round astronomical observatory (Caracol or snail). Buddhist and Hindu Sanctuaries in India and Cambodia suggested Reading: Ingersoll, pp. 141-147, 216-225, 265-279; Ching, pp. 30-31, 176-81, 214-15, 235-37, 244-45, 281, 594-95, 318-20; Moffett, pp. 67-85. Mohenjo-Daro (city in Indus Valley), today in Pakistan, ca 2500 BCE Buddhist sanctuanes (Buddha [565-480 BCE]) Sanchi, Great Stupa, 1st. century CE stupa relic mound with four gates (torana) Ajanta, Chaitya Hall, 250 CE chaitya = assembly hall or cave shrine, rock-cut sanctuaries Mahabalipuram, (Mamallapuram), Shore Temples, ca 700 CE two shrines dedicated to Shiva, one to Vishnu vimana = terraced tower above each shrine Madurai, Great Temple (Sri Meenakshi Temple), 1623 CE gopuram = terraced tower above a threshold (over a portal) Hindu Sanctuaries in Cambodia Angkor Wat, temple of the capital, 1 112-52 CE Architecture and Culture of China Suggested Reading: Ingersoll, pp. 175-182, 240-250, 424-436; Nuttgens, ch. 5; Ching, pp. 185, 286, 298-99; Moffett, pp. 86-99. Great Wall(s), first begun 221-206 BCE; maintained and upgraded primarily during the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644 CE). Guangdong (modern city with older districts); precedents: clay models buried in tombs, primarily from Han Dynasty burials (1st-2nd cents. CE); vernacular example: Hakka Housing. Chinese beam frame construction: Shanxi Province, Foguang Temple, 857 CE: wood frame construction, bracket clusters (tou-kung), concave roof profile. Various garden pavilions. beneficial, and the actions of man are in harmony with the social, cultural and political situations, then the feng Shui is auspicious. Three religious philosophies: Buddhism [imported from India; founded by Buddha (565-480 BCE)]. Confucianism: based on teachings of Confucius (551-479 BCE): based on moral conduct Cen) and combination of etiquette and ritual traditions (II). Taoism: based on Tao te Ching (The Book of the Virtuous Way), written by Lao-tzu, 6th cent. BCE. Songyue Pagoda, Henan Province, 520 CE Architecture and Culture of Japan Suggested Reading: Ingersoll, pp. 521-533; Nuttgens, ch. 5; Ching, pp. 287-92, 486-93; Moffett, pp. 9-109. Ise, Shinto Shrine, (Naiku), founded in 3rd cent. CE: dedicated to the Sun Goddess; tori, katsuogi, chigi, Wabi-Sabi. Nara, HoryuJi, Buddhist Shrine and Monastery, 7th cent. CE: hosho. Nagano, Matsumoto Castle, 16th cent CE. and Kobe (Hyogo), HimaJi Castle, 16th cent. CE; shogun garrison castles. Residential Archite cture Lashed frame structures: indigenous (vernacular) development. Two types develop from the lashed frame, and eventually merge together: . ) minka: based on lashed frame; rectangle, modular grid, interchangeable use of space; shoji. Teahouses (Sukiya)?influenced by Zen Buddhism Kyoto Province, Talan Teahouse, 16th cent. CE: tea-room with tokonoma, anteroom, entrance for tea master, garden path, exterior portico. Sukiya Style Residential Architecture Kyoto, Katsura Imperial Villa, 1625 CE. SURVEY OF ARCHITECTURAL HISTORY, I Greece: Site Planning: The Acropolis and the Agora Suggested Reading: Ingersoll, pp. 117-141; Trachtenberg, pp. 91-115; Nuttgens, pp. 86-101 ;sutton, pp. 10-17; Ching, pp. 121-24, 132-34 Moffett, pp. 53-56, 60-62. Important historical information: Dorians and Ionians: two of the tribes that settled in Aegean, beginning in 1100 BCE. Greek culture based on polis (city-state) and anthropomorphic polytheism (the worship of many gods who were divine but had human-like characteristics and form). Athens, Agora, 5th cent. BCE; open marketplace and civic center of the city; surrounded by several different building types arranged casually around the open square: Stoa of Zeus (stoa: long and narrow structure, usually open to one side with a colonnade, used for many civic purposes), New Bouleterion (bouleterion: council ouse), Temple of Hephaestus, Tholos or Skias (tholos: round temple type, here adapted for use as a dining room for the heads of the city council), South Stoa, Stoa of Attalus (added in the 2nd cent. BCE); the Panathenaic Way cuts across the Agora at a diagonal. Panathenaic Way: ceremonial path from Piraeus (the port city of Athens) through Athens up to the Acropolis; used for an annual procession in honor of Athena, the goddess who protected the city. Athens, Acropolis; the hill was inhabited as early as 3000 BCE; in the 13th century BCE the hilltop was occupied by a Mycenean citadel; transformed into an Archaic
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