On the Venetian islands there are thirty closed, abandoned or unused churches. The adjective “closed” is used to assimilate artefacts whose roots, history, prop- erty and condition are not common, which are no longer used for worship and whose gates are mostly shut. This archipelago of thirty churches is uniformly distributed in the Venetian districts. It was studied in a research project that focused on Venice and its forms of transformation and design using three key words: “heritage”, “use”, “narrative”.
The Archipelago of the Venetian Closed Churches / Sara, Marini; Monaci, Elisa. - (2019), pp. 389-398. (Intervento presentato al convegno Convegno Internazionale Dio non abita più qui? International Conference Doesn't God Dwell Here Anymore? tenutosi a Roma, Pontificia Università Gregoriana; Italy).
The Archipelago of the Venetian Closed Churches
MONACI, ELISA
2019
Abstract
On the Venetian islands there are thirty closed, abandoned or unused churches. The adjective “closed” is used to assimilate artefacts whose roots, history, prop- erty and condition are not common, which are no longer used for worship and whose gates are mostly shut. This archipelago of thirty churches is uniformly distributed in the Venetian districts. It was studied in a research project that focused on Venice and its forms of transformation and design using three key words: “heritage”, “use”, “narrative”.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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