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How Do We Want The Past To Be On Methods And Instruments Of Visualizing Ancient Reality Maria Gabriella Micale

  • SKU: BELL-49446386
How Do We Want The Past To Be On Methods And Instruments Of Visualizing Ancient Reality Maria Gabriella Micale
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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How Do We Want The Past To Be On Methods And Instruments Of Visualizing Ancient Reality Maria Gabriella Micale instant download after payment.

Publisher: Gorgias Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 8.72 MB
Pages: 175
Author: Maria Gabriella Micale, Davide Nadali
ISBN: 9781463205447, 1463205449, 2015031517
Language: English
Year: 2015

Product desciption

How Do We Want The Past To Be On Methods And Instruments Of Visualizing Ancient Reality Maria Gabriella Micale by Maria Gabriella Micale, Davide Nadali 9781463205447, 1463205449, 2015031517 instant download after payment.

This volume collects both presentations made on the occasion of a panel organized at the North American Theoretical Archaeological Group, held at the University of Buffalo in 2012, and other invited contributions on the same subject. The papers present the diverse attitudes of archaeologists and art historians in dealing with the visualization of the ancient Near Eastern architectural and material reality. The contributions aim at analysing how ancient architectures and urban space have been recovered and excavated, how the results of those excavations have been presented and their reception in the visual arts. Taking into consideration the way the ancient architecture has been represented through old and new media-thus starting from the most ancient examples of drawings up to the most recent computer-based graphics and creations-it is reasonably time to ask how we want to represent the past and, as a consequence, why we want it that way or another. The analyses in the book also point to the recent debate on the nature and use of 3D reconstructions and virtual reality with the creation of new models and informatics devices: does new technology solve the problems of interpreting and visualizing the archaeological evidences? Beyond technical and aesthetic differences, essays show how archaeologists are still dealing with the same set of problems in projecting a reconstruction of what is either badly preserved or irremediably lost.

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