The Scenography of Serpotta Stuccoes Revisited - Material and Form

The material that lies beneath the smooth shining surface of the stuccoes of the Serpotta family who used to work in Sicily from 1670 to 1730, has been thoroughly studied in previous papers, disclosing the deep, albeit empirical, knowledge of materials science that guided the artists in creating the...

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Main Authors: Salvatore Barba, Francesco Di Paola, Giovanni Rizzo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Bologna 2015-12-01
Series:Conservation Science in Cultural Heritage
Subjects:
Online Access:https://conservation-science.unibo.it/article/view/6182
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spelling doaj-77ae3a3316ca480da59f9750ec5129e12020-11-24T22:31:16ZengUniversity of BolognaConservation Science in Cultural Heritage1974-49511973-94942015-12-0115128131310.6092/issn.1973-9494/61825628The Scenography of Serpotta Stuccoes Revisited - Material and FormSalvatore Barba0Francesco Di Paola1Giovanni Rizzo2Università del SalentoUniversità di PalermoUniversità di PalermoThe material that lies beneath the smooth shining surface of the stuccoes of the Serpotta family who used to work in Sicily from 1670 to 1730, has been thoroughly studied in previous papers, disclosing the deep, albeit empirical, knowledge of materials science that guided the artists in creating their masterpieces. In this work, attention is focused on the solid perspective and on the scenographic sculpture by Giacomo Serpotta, who is acknowledged as the leading exponent of the School. The study deals with some particular works of the artist, the “small-scaled plastic theatres”, so-called “teatrini”, which he made for the San Lorenzo Oratory in Palermo. On the basis of archival documents and previous analogical photogrammetric plotting, integrated with digital solutions and computer-based technologies, the study investigates and interprets the geometric-formal genesis of the examined works of art. Knowledge of the material composition of the stuccoes, along with the ability to accurately reproduce their shapes, give interesting possibilities to provide a complete reading of the works of art damaged by deterioration or theft.https://conservation-science.unibo.it/article/view/6182philological reconstruction3D scanning techniquegeometric processingvirtual reassembly
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Salvatore Barba
Francesco Di Paola
Giovanni Rizzo
spellingShingle Salvatore Barba
Francesco Di Paola
Giovanni Rizzo
The Scenography of Serpotta Stuccoes Revisited - Material and Form
Conservation Science in Cultural Heritage
philological reconstruction
3D scanning technique
geometric processing
virtual reassembly
author_facet Salvatore Barba
Francesco Di Paola
Giovanni Rizzo
author_sort Salvatore Barba
title The Scenography of Serpotta Stuccoes Revisited - Material and Form
title_short The Scenography of Serpotta Stuccoes Revisited - Material and Form
title_full The Scenography of Serpotta Stuccoes Revisited - Material and Form
title_fullStr The Scenography of Serpotta Stuccoes Revisited - Material and Form
title_full_unstemmed The Scenography of Serpotta Stuccoes Revisited - Material and Form
title_sort scenography of serpotta stuccoes revisited - material and form
publisher University of Bologna
series Conservation Science in Cultural Heritage
issn 1974-4951
1973-9494
publishDate 2015-12-01
description The material that lies beneath the smooth shining surface of the stuccoes of the Serpotta family who used to work in Sicily from 1670 to 1730, has been thoroughly studied in previous papers, disclosing the deep, albeit empirical, knowledge of materials science that guided the artists in creating their masterpieces. In this work, attention is focused on the solid perspective and on the scenographic sculpture by Giacomo Serpotta, who is acknowledged as the leading exponent of the School. The study deals with some particular works of the artist, the “small-scaled plastic theatres”, so-called “teatrini”, which he made for the San Lorenzo Oratory in Palermo. On the basis of archival documents and previous analogical photogrammetric plotting, integrated with digital solutions and computer-based technologies, the study investigates and interprets the geometric-formal genesis of the examined works of art. Knowledge of the material composition of the stuccoes, along with the ability to accurately reproduce their shapes, give interesting possibilities to provide a complete reading of the works of art damaged by deterioration or theft.
topic philological reconstruction
3D scanning technique
geometric processing
virtual reassembly
url https://conservation-science.unibo.it/article/view/6182
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