Rome: Continuity and Change

1291c

Credits: 
3
Term: 
Summer 2010
Instructor(s): 
Harby, Stephen
Instructor(s): 
Purves, Alexander

This intensive four-week summer workshop takes place in Rome and is designed to provide a broad overview of that city’s major architectural sites, topography, and systems of urban organization. Examples from antiquity to the twentieth century are studied as part of the context of an ever-changing city with its sequence of layered accretions. The seminar examines historical continuity and change as well as the ways in which and the reasons why some elements and approaches were maintained over time and others abandoned. Drawing is used as a primary tool of discovery during explorations of buildings, landscapes, and gardens, both within and outside the city. Students devote the final week to an intensive independent analysis of a building or place. M.Arch. I students are eligible to enroll in this course after completing at least three terms. The course requires an additional tuition charge. Limited enrollment.

Open only to M.Arch. I second-year and M.Arch. II first-year students.

(formerly 791c)