The Ruin Aesthetic: Episodes in the History of an Architectural Idea

One of the arresting images in Michel Serres's Rome: The Book of Foundations is the idea that history is "a knot of different times" — a knot rendered visible by the tangible traces of past civilizations. The knot of which Serres speaks applies as readily to the stratigraphic realities of Roman urban space as to the composite aesthetics of 18th-century ruin pictures or Symbolist recasting of Medieval church portals. Artifacts, fragments, vestiges, rubble, debris, detritus, wreckage: all this has prompted a venerable body of writings and objects that work the metaphor of ruin into anything from a template for the Sublime to a mechanism for iconoclastic violence. We will begin by thinking about architecture and the vision of the past in the early modern period, considering a range of examples from the Hypnerotomachia Poliphili to antiquarian treatises. We will then consider how the cult of the ruin has shaped nostalgia and dystopia in modern contexts. Examples might include the Surrealist discovery of the Broken Column House at the Desert de Retz, Le Corbusier's apprehension of columns segments from the north facade of the Parthenon, the Heideggerian concept of Ruinanz and the reflection of absence in the National September 11 Memorial. 

Prerequisites 
This advanced history elective is designed for students in the postprofessional (MDES) and doctoral programs (PHD/DDES) as well as students in the professional programs who have completed core and, preferably, are embarking on thesis. Some knowledge of the history and theory of architecture is highly recommended but not required. 

A limited number of seats are held for PhD students. Interested PhD students should contact the instructor as well as petition to cross-register.