Et in Arcadia Ego. The Mausoleum at Castle Howard (en inglés)

<p><strong>Abstract</strong></p><p>All buildings that populate the garden of Castle Howard in a seemingly random, always placed on small hills, convey the feeling of being constantly observed objects, rather than being themselves observation sites surrounding territory....

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Main Author: María Teresa Muñoz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidad Politécnica de Madrid 2012-12-01
Series:Cuadernos de Proyectos Arquitectónicos
Online Access:http://polired.upm.es/index.php/proyectos_arquitectonicos/article/view/1963
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spelling doaj-c8d7c49e7f994f918dfd199302c2f1b62020-11-24T22:56:53ZengUniversidad Politécnica de MadridCuadernos de Proyectos Arquitectónicos2171-956X2174-11312012-12-0103133135Et in Arcadia Ego. The Mausoleum at Castle Howard (en inglés)María Teresa Muñoz<p><strong>Abstract</strong></p><p>All buildings that populate the garden of Castle Howard in a seemingly random, always placed on small hills, convey the feeling of being constantly observed objects, rather than being themselves observation sites surrounding territory. They are&nbsp; more the gaze receptors than its origin, and this is particularly relevant in the case of the mausoleum of Hawksmoor, more&nbsp; than a pavilion or a landmark in the landscape as it is the culmination of an itinerary that covers all of them and the counterpoint to the main house. The mausoleum is the building most inhabited and the most qualified from the spatial point of view, the most closed, the emptiest, the most inaccessible and the closest. This circular building can be watched with emotion&nbsp; from afar, but also encouraged to approach their limits, to almost physically feel the vitality of who lives inside that cage of stone, and dwells there forever reminding us that, as stated&nbsp; Erwin Panofsky, death is the real subject of the existence in the Arcadian landscape.</p><p><strong>Key words</strong></p><p>Castle Howard, paysage, mausoleum, Hawksmoor, arcadia, death, Panofsky</p>http://polired.upm.es/index.php/proyectos_arquitectonicos/article/view/1963
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author María Teresa Muñoz
spellingShingle María Teresa Muñoz
Et in Arcadia Ego. The Mausoleum at Castle Howard (en inglés)
Cuadernos de Proyectos Arquitectónicos
author_facet María Teresa Muñoz
author_sort María Teresa Muñoz
title Et in Arcadia Ego. The Mausoleum at Castle Howard (en inglés)
title_short Et in Arcadia Ego. The Mausoleum at Castle Howard (en inglés)
title_full Et in Arcadia Ego. The Mausoleum at Castle Howard (en inglés)
title_fullStr Et in Arcadia Ego. The Mausoleum at Castle Howard (en inglés)
title_full_unstemmed Et in Arcadia Ego. The Mausoleum at Castle Howard (en inglés)
title_sort et in arcadia ego. the mausoleum at castle howard (en inglés)
publisher Universidad Politécnica de Madrid
series Cuadernos de Proyectos Arquitectónicos
issn 2171-956X
2174-1131
publishDate 2012-12-01
description <p><strong>Abstract</strong></p><p>All buildings that populate the garden of Castle Howard in a seemingly random, always placed on small hills, convey the feeling of being constantly observed objects, rather than being themselves observation sites surrounding territory. They are&nbsp; more the gaze receptors than its origin, and this is particularly relevant in the case of the mausoleum of Hawksmoor, more&nbsp; than a pavilion or a landmark in the landscape as it is the culmination of an itinerary that covers all of them and the counterpoint to the main house. The mausoleum is the building most inhabited and the most qualified from the spatial point of view, the most closed, the emptiest, the most inaccessible and the closest. This circular building can be watched with emotion&nbsp; from afar, but also encouraged to approach their limits, to almost physically feel the vitality of who lives inside that cage of stone, and dwells there forever reminding us that, as stated&nbsp; Erwin Panofsky, death is the real subject of the existence in the Arcadian landscape.</p><p><strong>Key words</strong></p><p>Castle Howard, paysage, mausoleum, Hawksmoor, arcadia, death, Panofsky</p>
url http://polired.upm.es/index.php/proyectos_arquitectonicos/article/view/1963
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