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introduction |
The Eidomatics Laboratory (EIDOLAB) was created at the Faculty of Architecture
of Ascoli Piceno (University of Camerino) in 1999 as a facility for
research and teaching. Prof. Francesco Cervellini and Prof. Elena Ippoliti
joined it, along with a group of young scholars and graduates: Simona
Candidori, Patricia Ciurluini, Francesca Coltellacci, Raffaele D’Eredità,
Giovanni Gambino, Angela Magionami, Andrea Paolini and Daniele Rossi
who conducted thei theses in the Lab and were engaged in several activities
of applied research and teaching assistantship. The Eidomatics Lab offers
two main contributions to the students in architecture and in industrial
design: on one side it aims at ensuring a basic understanding and knowledge
of the new tools and communicative/performative digital languages of
visual form; on the other side it wants to experimentally measure the
cognitive interference between those very tools and design culture.
In this sense the Eidomatics Lab also offers itself as the privileged
didactic/scientific place for research and for the elaboration of useful
materials aimed at a critical evaluation of digital representation and
invention as they compare to traditional analogic representations. Francesco Cervellini, Elena Ippoliti |
Installation at the Stazione Leopolda, Florence (photo by: Omar Cotza) |
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Perception
and visual communication Instructors: Francesco Cervellini, Elena Ippoliti |
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Francesca Coltellacci, degree thesis. Board Primary objective of the course in Perception and Visual Communication is fostering the approach to the new languages that make use of information instruments and understanding their interference with architectural design. The course is in fact mainly devoted to in-class assignments aimed at the creation of simple "communication objects" dealing with architectural topics and buildings and/or with specific environments. Also it contributes to developing a critical awareness of representations by means of informatics. The EIDOLAB tends to favor three main fields of activity: - experimental investigation on the new morphographic and morphogenetic possibilities of digital languages; - analytical investigation of buildings and urban clusters, especially -but not merely- those characterized by a historical stratification, by means of their placement in their specific environment or by means of their integration in 3D digital models of the territory, each equipped with an explanatory card; - disclosure of the most important softwares employed in the field of architecture and industrial design, in order to allow the students to understand their usage and functioning, and adopt them as new techniques for textual construction rather than as mere mechanical procedures. Students: Davide Aimola, Marina Alesi, Simone Animobono, Cristiana Antonini, Alessandro Azzari, Giulio Baldini, Flavia Benigni, Denis Berrettarossa, Marialaura Borgognoni, Patrizia Veronica Burgio, Stefania Calamante, Adriano Capriotti, Massimiliano Carloni, Margherita Casilio, Simona Cavina, Federica Ciapanna, Patrizia Ciotti, Marino Ciucci, Yuri Consorti, Federica Corbelli, Luca Curci, Alessia De Angelis, Alessandra De Berardis, Stefania De Iulis, Emanuele Della Ceca, Sandra Di Federico, Andrea Di Felice, Roberto Di Girolami, Damiana Di Maggio, Arnaldo Di Sante, Laura Egidi, Marco Falzetti, Gianluca Fontana, Luca Frattari, Fabrizia Gabrielli, Daniele Gentili, Lucia Giraldi, Fabio Giuliani, Aliona Huskova, Marco Illuminati, Iglis Lako, Daniela Leone, Carla Lucci, Marco Magistro, Igor Magnani, Doria Marcelli, Fabio Marcelli, Valentina Massaccesi, Marzia Mazzantini, Serena Mazzeo, Nico Monteferrante, Luca Moreschini, Giovanna Moretti, Paolo Moriconi, Christiane Mounga, Luana Narcisi, Massimiliano Natanni, Stefano Novelli, Giampiero Ottaviano, Stefania Palanca, Massimiliano Perazzoli, Daniele Peroni, Laura Peroni, Emanuele Piccioni, Andrea Pierleoni, Caterina Piunti, Daniela Quondamatteo, Marco Razzè, Alberto Rebichini, Roberto Ripani, Michele Romoli, Stefania Sasso, Sara Scattolini, Giacomo Scendoni, Cinzia Spada, Simone Squadroni, Chiara Stefani, Paola Tempestilli, Ester Teodori, Francesco Vagnoni, Alessandra Valentini, Marco Viola, Daniela Vittori, Manuela Vittori. |
Francesco
Cervellini, born in Rome in 1945, graduated in Architecture from
La Sapienza University in 1971. He has been teaching Visual Design since
1982. Between 1994 and 2001 he held the Chair in Visual Design at the
Faculty of Architecture in Ascoli Piceno and since 1998 he holds the
Chair in Perception and Visual Communication at the same institution. Elena Ippoliti, born in Rome in 1962, graduated in Architecture from La Sapienza University in 1989. She received her PhD in Survey and Representation of Buildings in 1995. Since 2000 she teaches Urban and Environmental Survey in the Workshop on Urban Design at the Faculty of Architecture in Ascoli Piceno. |
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