Patricios - 1973 - Concepts of Space in Urban Design, Architecture and Art
Patricios - 1973 - Concepts of Space in Urban Design, Architecture and Art
Patricios - 1973 - Concepts of Space in Urban Design, Architecture and Art
Author(s): N. N. Patricios
Source: Leonardo , Autumn, 1973, Vol. 6, No. 4 (Autumn, 1973), pp. 311-318
Published by: The MIT Press
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CONCEPTS OF SPACE IN
URBAN DESIGN,
ARCHITECTURE AND ART
N. N. Patricios*
I. INTRODUCTION espace which in turn was derived from the Latin word
spatium [1]. In physics, space has three dimensions
The question as to what the nature of space is has
and is considered as a volume, not an area.
long fascinated man. For many centuries the notion
On the other hand the idea of space, which was
of space has intrigued artists and architects and
elaborated by Sir Isaac Newton in the 17th century,
exercised the minds of philosophers and mathe-
is that space is absolute, has an existence proper
maticians. In recent years, psychologists and
to itself and is independent of the bodies it contains
cultural anthropologists, in particular, have opened
[2]. My discussion does not require the use of the
up new avenues that suggest a revision of the usual
concept of space of the theory of relativity, which is
approach to the conception and representation of
more closely approximated by non-Euclidean
space. By drawing upon their contributions, I
geometry, however I do mention it.
hope to show that one is enabled to explain why
different cultures have characteristic spatial
2. designs,
A new approach [3]
as expressed in their cities, buildings and art.
From the studies of psychologists, anthropolo-
gists, philosophers and physicists and others, it
would appear that they distinguish two broad
II. CONCEPTS OF SPACE categories of space: the physical and the mental.
For the purposes of this paper when reference is
1. Traditional definitions made to physical space, it is that defined as con-
tinuous, unbounded extension in three directions,
According to the Oxford English Dictionary
regarded
the word space has two meanings: the first as void of matter or without reference to it.
denotes
time or duration and the second area or extension. Mental space, however, is an image of physical
The second meaning is the more common and was space. Early psychologists believed that there was
first used in Middle English back in the 13th century. an exact correspondence between a mental image
The English word was adapted from the Old French and the physical world. Now, however, there is
dissension as to the process and mechanism of the
* Department of Town and Regional Planning, University
perception of space, mainly as there is evidence to
of the Witwatersrand, Jan Smuts Avenue, Johannesburg, show that the resultant images are sensations
South Africa. (Received 26 July 1972.) manipulated primarily by factors such as personality
311
is identical with this symbol of a circumscribed cross, order imposed by the perspective characteristics
which appears again and again on ritual vessels of of the prevailing concept of space, the composition
Egyptian, Mesopotamian and other cultures. in representational three-dimensional space and the
A modern interpretation of the ancient Greek's harmony of geometric proportions is evident. On
concept of the cosmos is that of an enormous the other hand, Baroque perspective had multiple
sphere with nothing outside its circumference. The planes receding into a limitless field of vision.
Earth was considered to be at the centre of this cosmic Typical towns of the late Baroque period, such as
sphere, the inner surface of which was believed to Versailles and Karlsruhe, had the palace of the
contain all the stars. It is very important to establish ruler as the origin of an axial vista that pointed to
here that the gap between the Earth and the concave infinity. It appears that the discovery of infinitesimal
plane (the inner surface of the sphere) containing calculus led to a widespread acceptance of the
all the stars was considered by the influential Greek concept of infinity at this time.
philosophers to contain orbiting planets and to be Bacon [18] follows Dorner's approach but he
filled with air, and was never considered to be space interprets the interaction of spatial concepts and
in the Newtonian sense of the expanse in which their physical realization over only four periods of
the solar and stellar systems, nebulae, etc. are situ- history. However, Siegfried Giedion [19] in his
ated [15]. The principles of this cosmic concept, I be- research into the evolution of ideas in architectural
lieve, were used in the laying out of whole towns space, attributes the most ambitious attempt ever
and in the arrangement of buildings in temple pre- made to interpret the whole course of art history in
cincts and agorae. Many authorities have described terms of changing modes of perception to Alois
the location of buildings in ancient Greek temple Riegl (1858-1905) in his Spdtromische Kunst-
precincts as haphazard but I have shown that this Industrie. Heinrich Wolfflin (1864-1945) in his
conclusion is derived by considering these precincts work Principles of Art History has also shown that
in terms of the present concept of space; I have also the comprehension of the art of a period requires
shown in some detail how the principles referred to some knowledge of the philosophical, religious and
above were applied [16]. Briefly, I found that ancient scientific attitudes of that period. This tradition
Greek layouts and arrangements become meaningful has been continued by E. H. Gombrich when he
when the buildings are considered as bodies separated contrasts the Egyptian artists who relied on 'what
by air and not as bodies set in space. Buildings were they knew' and the Impressionists, who succeeded
arranged in such a way that the mathematical in recording 'what they saw' [20]. In re-examining
relationships between them were symbolically the the traditional distinction between 'knowing' and
same as those between the planets themselves. 'seeing', he reaches the conclusion that no artist
Dorner believes that in the Middle Ages the Greek can 'paint what he sees' [21] (Fig. 1). This view is
concept of space (an aggregate of bodies separated supported by a recent study that shows that painters
by air) was changed into a spiritual vision of a in different epochs, without necessarily being fully
unified solidity that was permeated with a super- aware of the fact, have represented in painting the
natural 'light of love'. The idea of the cathedral is mental images of reality of their times [22] (Fig. 2).
derived from some of the prevailing philosophical
ideas of the time. The idea is not entirely at the
didactic level, as shown so clearly by Emile Male,
but, more precisely, it is an image representing
supernatural reality, as expounded by Otto von
Simson [17]. The cathedral, in whole and in all its
detail, was an architectual analogy of the image of
Heaven and, according to von Simson, this expe-
rience by the faithful was achieved by means of
'Measure' (the use of mathematics and certain
significant proportions as in the case of the ancient
Greeks) and 'Light'-the corporeal light shining
through coloured glass symbolizing spiritual lux
by which the soul reaches sure knowledge.
The Renaissance concept of space, in contrast,
is characterized by rationality and one-point, or
central, perspective of a simple object. The ensuing
'geometrization' of natural and human life is clearly Fig. 1. Cathedral of Notre Dame, Chartres. Left:
seen in La Grande Perspective of the palaces and Robert Garland, 1836, engraving after lithograph from
B. Winkles, 'French Cathedrals'. Right: Modem
mansions where buildings, gardens and sculpture
photograph. (Illustrations 48 and 49, E. H. Gombrich,
are frozen into a formal layout. The centrally
Art and Illusion (London: Phaidon Press, 1960)).
designed church or cathedral and the star-shaped The artist is a romantic to whom the French cathedrals
city fulfilled the same role-that of a symbolic are the epitome of the Gothic centuries. He conceives
observer standing at the focal point of the building of Chartres as a Gothic structure with pointed arches but
or the city. In Renaissance painting too, for fails to record the Romanesque rounded windows of the
example Raphael's 'School of Athens', the static west facade.
culture. Of course, certain conventions are shared 15. N. N. Patricios, The Spatial Concepts of the
by different cultures, for if there were no sharing, Ancient Greeks, Acta Classica 14, 17 (1971).
communication and artistic continuity would be very 16. See Ref. 3, Ch. 8.
limited. I have, however, concentrated on the 17. 0. von Simson, Gothic Cathedral: Origins of
Gothic Architecture and the Medieval Concept of
cultural differences in spatial perception, as this is
Order, 2nd rev. edition (New York: Pantheon
not widely recognized, especially in the fields of
Books, 1962).
design. This would be more apparent and likely 18. E. N. Bacon, Design of Cities (London: Thames &
to be accepted if the conventions for describing Hudson, 1967).
space were better known-if it was realized that the 19. S. Giedion, The Eternal Present, Vol. II of The
reality of space is interpreted by the mind of the Beginnings of Architecture (London: Oxford
observer. From the examples of urban design, University Press, 1964) p. 499.
architecture and art I have described, it is quite 20. E. H. Gombrich, The Story of Art, 11th edition
evident that certain spatial schemata, products of the (London: Phaidon Press, 1966).
human mind, predominate. Finally, this emphasis 21. E. H. Gombrich, Art and Illusion (London:
Phaidon Press, 1960) p. vii.
on the mental aspects of space is not meant to
22. J. Mandelbrojt On Mental Images and Their
underrate the importance of an understanding of
Pictorial Representation, Leonardo 3, 19 (1970).
physical space that is essential as a frame of reference 23. H. Read, Icon and Idea: The Function of Art in the
for all organisms, if they are to survive. Development of Human Consciousness (London:
Faber & Faber, 1955), p. 61.
I am indebted to I. E. Thompson of the Depart-
24. See Ref. 21, p. 15.
ment of Philosophy and J. S. Gelfand of the Depart-
25. See Ref. 13(b), p. 163.
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Witwatersrand, for their comments on the draft Architectural and Urban Spaces, Town Planning
manuscript. Review 32, 44 (April 1961).
27. C. Sitte, City Planning According to Artistic
Principles, trans. by G. R. Collins and C. C.
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