VENETIAN ART AND ARCHAEOLOGY – 2 VENETIAN HERITAGE IN THE ADRIATIC AND IN THE MEDITERRANEAN
- Anno accademico
- 2025/2026 Programmi anni precedenti
- Titolo corso in inglese
- VENETIAN ART AND ARCHAEOLOGY – 2 VENETIAN HERITAGE IN THE ADRIATIC AND IN THE MEDITERRANEAN
- Codice insegnamento
- SIE066 (AF:603753 AR:340961)
- Lingua di insegnamento
- Inglese
- Modalità
- In presenza
- Crediti formativi universitari
- 6
- Livello laurea
- Corso di Perfezionamento
- Settore scientifico disciplinare
- L-ART/02
- Periodo
- II Semestre
- Anno corso
- 1
- Sede
- VENEZIA
- Spazio Moodle
- Link allo spazio del corso
Inquadramento dell'insegnamento nel percorso del corso di studio
Risultati di apprendimento attesi
- to identify, describe, analyse, and compare archaeological sites, cultural landscapes, and works of architecture, painting, and sculpture;
- to recognise and interpret the stratification of archaeological and historical contexts, understanding the processes of transformation that have shaped sites and landscapes over time;
- to place monuments, artworks, archaeological remains, and landscapes within their historical, cultural, and geographical settings;
- to evaluate their significance within the broader development of European Art History and Archaeology, tracing continuities, changes, and interactions across different periods and regions.
Prerequisiti
Contenuti
Through the study of archaeological sites, historic urban centres, architectural monuments, artistic production, and cultural landscapes, the course will explore significant yet often lesser-known aspects of Venetian history beyond the lagoon. Particular attention will be devoted to the ways in which Venetian political, economic, artistic, and architectural culture shaped the landscapes of the Adriatic and Mediterranean worlds and interacted with local traditions over the centuries. By analysing the stratified heritage of these regions, students will gain a deeper understanding of the enduring impact of Venetian civilisation on the built environment and cultural landscapes of the eastern Adriatic and Mediterranean.
Testi di riferimento
BOOKS
(COMPULSORY) G. Scarabello, G. Ortalli, A Short History of Venice, 2004, pp. 7-23; 43-47; 57-67; 73-76; 83-87.
(OPTIONAL) G. Vale, REPUBLIC OF VENICE. An unusual journey through Italy, Slovenia, Croatia, Montenegro, Albania, Greece and Cyprus, Zagreb 2021, pp. 164-314.
LIST OF ARTICLES AND BOOK CHAPTERS
B. Arbel, Venice’s Maritime Empire in the Early Modern Period, in E. Dursteler (ed.), Cambridge Companion to Venetian History, Cambridge 2013, pp. 125-253
N. Bakirtzis, Fortifications as urban heritage. The case of Nicosia in Cyprus and a glance at the city of Rhodes, “Memoirs of the American Academy in Rome”, Vol. 62, Special Issue: National Narratives and the Medieval Mediterranean (2017), pp. 171-192
C. Carpinato, Crete in Venice. The Presence of the Great Island in Venetian Architecture, Visual Arts, Music, and Literature, in L. Giannakopoulou, E. K. Skordyles (eds.), Culture and society in Crete: from Kornaros to Kazantzakis, 2017, pp. 217-240
K. Lowe, Visible Lives: Black Gondoliers and Other Black Africans in Renaissance Venice, “Renaissance Quarterly”, Vol. 66, No. 2 (Summer 2013), pp. 412-452
G. Necipoğlu, Visual Cosmopolitanism and Creative Translation: Artistic Conversations with Renaissance Italy in Mehmed II’s Constantinople, “Muqarnas”, vol. 29, 2012, pp. 1-81.
A. Ong, What Marco Polo Forgot’: Contemporary Chinese Art Reconfigures the Global, “Current Anthropology”, vol. 53, no. 4, 2012, pp. 471–94.
B. Ravid, Venice and its Minorities, in E. Dursteler (ed.), Cambridge Companion to Venetian History, Cambridge 2013, pp. 125-253
F. Shen, Shakespeare in China: The Merchant of Venice, “Asian Theatre Journal”, Spring, 1988, Vol. 5, No. 1 (Spring, 1988), pp. 23-37 [Fan Shen 1988] Teaching materials are available on Moodle.
BOOKS
(COMPULSORY) G. Scarabello, G. Ortalli, A Short History of Venice, 2004, pp. 7-23; 43-47; 57-67; 73-76; 83-87.
(OPTIONAL) G. Vale, REPUBLIC OF VENICE. An unusual journey through Italy, Slovenia, Croatia, Montenegro, Albania, Greece and Cyprus, Zagreb 2021, pp. 164-314.
LIST OF ARTICLES AND BOOK CHAPTERS
B. Arbel, Venice’s Maritime Empire in the Early Modern Period, in E. Dursteler (ed.), Cambridge Companion to Venetian History, Cambridge 2013, pp. 125-253
N. Bakirtzis, Fortifications as urban heritage. The case of Nicosia in Cyprus and a glance at the city of Rhodes, “Memoirs of the American Academy in Rome”, Vol. 62, Special Issue: National Narratives and the Medieval Mediterranean (2017), pp. 171-192
C. Carpinato, Crete in Venice. The Presence of the Great Island in Venetian Architecture, Visual Arts, Music, and Literature, in L. Giannakopoulou, E. K. Skordyles (eds.), Culture and society in Crete: from Kornaros to Kazantzakis, 2017, pp. 217-240
K. Lowe, Visible Lives: Black Gondoliers and Other Black Africans in Renaissance Venice, “Renaissance Quarterly”, Vol. 66, No. 2 (Summer 2013), pp. 412-452
G. Necipoğlu, Visual Cosmopolitanism and Creative Translation: Artistic Conversations with Renaissance Italy in Mehmed II’s Constantinople, “Muqarnas”, vol. 29, 2012, pp. 1-81.
A. Ong, What Marco Polo Forgot’: Contemporary Chinese Art Reconfigures the Global, “Current Anthropology”, vol. 53, no. 4, 2012, pp. 471–94.
B. Ravid, Venice and its Minorities, in E. Dursteler (ed.), Cambridge Companion to Venetian History, Cambridge 2013, pp. 125-253
Modalità di verifica dell'apprendimento
Students are also encouraged to prepare an individual presentation on a topic previously agreed upon with the lecturer. The presentation will provide an opportunity to explore a specific case study, site, monument, or aspect of Venetian heritage in greater depth and to develop independent research and communication skills.
Detailed information regarding the structure, requirements, and assessment criteria of the final examination will be presented during the first lecture, regularly reviewed throughout the course, and made available on the Moodle platform.
Modalità di esame
Il/la docente ha il dovere di vigilare affinché siano rispettate le regole di autenticità e originalità delle prove d'esame. Di conseguenza, nei casi in cui vi sia il sospetto di un comportamento irregolare, l'esame può prevedere un ulteriore approfondimento, contestuale alla prova d'esame, che potrà essere realizzato anche in modalità differente rispetto alle modalità sopra riportate.
Graduazione dei voti
Metodi didattici
Particular emphasis will be placed on the critical reading of archaeological sites, monuments, urban fabrics, and cultural landscapes through the analysis of maps, historical documents, architectural drawings, photographs, and digital resources. Case studies will be used to investigate the processes of cultural exchange, continuity, and transformation that shaped these territories over time.
Seminar discussions will encourage students to engage critically with primary and secondary sources, compare different regional experiences, and reflect on the relationships between heritage, landscape, memory, and identity. Whenever possible, guided visits to museums, archaeological sites, historic centres, or Venetian monuments will complement classroom activities, enabling students to develop direct observational skills and to apply theoretical concepts to the analysis of material and landscape evidence.
Through these integrated teaching methods, students will acquire the methodological tools necessary to interpret the archaeological, artistic, architectural, and landscape heritage of the former Venetian maritime domains within their broader historical and cultural contexts.
Altre informazioni
Obiettivi Agenda 2030 per lo sviluppo sostenibile
Questo insegnamento tratta argomenti connessi alla macroarea "Capitale umano, salute, educazione" e concorre alla realizzazione dei relativi obiettivi ONU dell'Agenda 2030 per lo Sviluppo Sostenibile