01

Montebelluna (TV), 2007

02

Montebelluna (TV), 2007

03

Montebelluna (TV), 2007

04

Jesolo (VE), 2007

05

Jesolo (VE), 2007

06

Volpago del Montello (TV), 2007

07

Signoressa (TV), 2007

08

Quarto d'Altino (VE), 2008

 

The Pleasure of the Outdated | 2005-2008

The area situated into the Treviso and Venezia districts is workshop of languages, historical

stratifications and quick occupation processes of agricultural lands, subordinated to mobility

requirements of vehicles, goods and people. The patrimony of the urban, landscapist and

anthropological identity is seriously at risk. Part of the agrarian landscape, reclaimed,

shows the marks of devastation, of alterations in agroeconomy and of the new economical

and commercial arrangement which has on many occasions moved towards the coasting areas.

On the remains of changes of the territory, some marks and fragments of rural archeology

emerge: farmhouses and agricultural ruins where the vegetation, like a virus, has damaged

the architectural structure itself, changing its morphology. Immediate in the observer is mind

reference to the past, the experience of time, memory, the charm of the ruins, the idea of

sublime suggested by Piranesi and Goethe, the promised revelation by this invasion of

disorder and devastation. The fascination issued by these hybrid bodies, territory of

experimentation between architecture and nature, material and vegetable, past and

contemporary, concerns the one who looks at some pure enjoyment of the outdated.

The pleasure and the emotions that one feels looking at them are of an aesthetic nature,

afterwards one feels a distance:

 

«that one between a past sense, disappeared, and an actual perception, incomplete. The

perception of this margin between two uncertainties, between two unfinished states is the

essential reason of our pleasure… The perception of this margin is the same perception of

the time, erased in the twinkling of an eye wheter by the erudition and the restoration (the

illusory obviousness of the past) or by the sight and the renovation (the illusory obviousness

of the present).»

 

Marc Augé ‘Ruins and rubble’. The sense of time, Turin, 2004

 

It almost looks like nature can take care of secrets of the past better than man: decadent but

animated by their own inner life made of plants and animals, extraordinary evidence of memory,

history and culture.

 

Enjoyment of pure time, pure pleasure of the outdated.

 

Originally published in the March 2010 on Urbanautica

Originally published in the November 2010 on New Landscape Photography