Frascari M The Tell The Tale Detail 3 A
Frascari M The Tell The Tale Detail 3 A
Frascari M The Tell The Tale Detail 3 A
The architectural community has traditionally ascribed the maxim "God lies in the
detail" to Mies van dcr Robe.' The German version of the adage, Der Iiebe Gott steckt in
Detail perhaps the original source of Mies's maxim, was used by Aby Warburg to indi
cate the foundation of the iconographical method fo r researching in art history. The
French version has been attributed to Gustave Flaubert, and in this case the maxim indi
cates a manner of literary production.' The common denominator in these different
forms and uses indicates that the detail expresses the process of signification; t hat is, the
attaching of meanings to man-produced objects. The details are then the wcii where
knowledge is of an order in which the mind finds its own working, t hat is, wgos.3
The aim of this paper is to indicate the role of details as generators, a role nadi
-.:ionally ascribed to the plan, and to show that technology, with its double-faced presence
as technt! ofwgos" and "logos of techne~4 is the basis for the understanding of the ro le of
details. That is to say the "construction'' and the "construing" ofarchitecture are both in
the detail. Elusive in a traditional dimensional d efinition, the architect ural detail can be
defined as the union of construction, the result of the wgos of techni, with consnuing,
the result of the techni oflogos.
Details are much more than subordinate elements; they can be regarded as t he min
imal units of signification in the architectural production of meanings. T hese units have
been singled out in spatial cells or in elements of composition, in modules or in mea
sures, in the alternating of void and solid, or in the relationship between inside and out
side. 5 The suggestion that the detail is the minimal unit of production is more fru itfu l
because of the double-faced role of technology, which unifies the tangible and the intan
gible of architecture. As Jean Labatut, a French Beaux-Arts-trained Princeton professor
From VL4 7 ; Th r Building vfArchitecture (198+): 2r 37 . Courresy of the aurhor and publisher.
of archit(:Cture notes: "\Vhatev(:r th(: air spaces, areas and dimensions involved, it is the
precise study and good execution of derails which confirm architectural greatness. ' The
detail cells t he tale.'"6
In the details ace the possibilities of innovation and invention, and it is through
these that architects .can give harmony to the most uncommon and difficult or disorder
ly environment generated by a culture? The notion that architecture is a result of the res
olutio n, substitution, and design ofdetails has always been a latent concept in architects'
minds. That is t o say, there is truth in the classical commonplace of architectural criti
c is m: "That might have been great architectu re if only somebody had worked o ut the
d etails.... " Careful derailing is the most impo rtant means for avoiding building failure, o n
both dimensions of the architectural profession-the ethical and the aesthetic. The art o f
d etailing is really the joining of materials, dements, components, and building parts in a
functional and aesthetic manner. The complexity of this art of joining is such that a d (:tail
p erforming satisfactorily in one building may fail in another for very subtle reasons. 8
The discussion of the role of detail in the architectural process of signification will
be developed in two parts. These-inquiries analyze the u nderstanding of the role of the
d etail within two different but interlocking realms, the theoretical and the empirical.
The first part is a search for an understanding of the Concept of details in differe nt
levels of architectural production. The result of this inquiry is the conceptual identifica
tion ofrhe detail with the making of the joint and the recognition that derails themselves
can i mpose order on the whole through their own order. Consequendy, the understand
ing and execution of details co nstitute the basic process by wh ich the architectural pra c
t ice and t heories should be developed.
The second part is an analysis of the architecture of Carlo Scarpa (19o6-I979), a
Veneto architect. In Scarpas architecture, as Louis Kahn pointed our, Kderail is the adora
tion of nature." The archicecrural production of this architect, in which the adoration of
the maki ng of joints is almost obsessive, allows an empirical inrer prerarion of the rol e of
detail in the process o f significatio n, seen within culcurally definable modes o f construc
tio n and construing. In Scarpa's wo rks the relationships between che whole and the parts
and the relationships between craftsmanship and draftsmanship allow a direct substanti
ating in corpou viii of the idenciry of the processes of perception and production, that is,
th e union of the construction with the construing in the making and use of details.
Dictionaries define "detail as a small part in relation to a larger whole. In arch itec
ture rhis definition is contradict ory, if nor meaningless. A column is a derail as well as it
is a larger whole, and a whole classical round temple is somet imes a derail, when it is a
lantern on the t op o f a dome. In architectural literature, columns and capitals are classi
fied as details, but so are piani nobi/i, porches, and pergolas. The problem of scale and
dimension in those classificat ions and the relationship between aediculas and edifices
makes the dictionary definition useless in architecture. H owever, it is possible t o observe
chat any architectural d emen t defined as detail is always a joint. Derails can be "materi
al joinrs," as in the case of a ca pital, which is rhe connection between a column shaft and
an architrave, or they can be "formal join ts," as in the case of a porch, which is the con
n ection between an interior and an exterior space. D etails are then a direct resulc of the
multifold reality of fun ctions in architecture. They are the mediate or immediate expres
sions of the structure and che use of buildings.9
The etymological origin of the word "detail" does not help at all in understanding
10
the architectural use of the term. In architectural literature the term appeared in t he
French theoretical works of the eighteenth century and from France spread all over
Europe. This spread was caused by the coupling of the term with the concept of "style"
and by the active influence of French literary criticism and t heory on the French neo
classical architects. In r6yo Despreaux Nicolas Boileau, in the first part of his L'Art
Pottique, warning against the use of superfluous derails in poems, set an analogy between
an overderailed palace and an overderailed poem. n By the eighteenth cenrury t his anal
ogy was commonplace and, ascribing it to Monresquieu, Giovanni Battista Piranesi
attacked it as trivial in his defense of his archirecrural t heory of overderailed buildings. 12
The French theoreticians of the archit~cture par/ante were the ones who formally
consolidated the role of derail in architectural production. In the analogy of rhe "speak
ing architecrure," the architectural derails are seen as words composing a sentence. And,
as the selection of words and style gives character to the sentence, in a similar way the
selection ofderails and style gives character to a building. This powerful role of the derail
as generaror of rhe character of a building was also poinred our by John Soane in one of
his lectures on architecture: "Too much attemion can nor be given ro .produce a distinct
Character in every building, nor only in great fearures, bur in minor detail likewise; even
a moulding, however diminutive, contributes to increase or lessen rhe Character of the
assemblage of which it forms a part."'3
In the Beaux-Arts tradition the understanding of the role of derail as a generator of
the character of buildings determined a very peculiar graphic means for the study of it,
the analytique. In this graphic representation of a designed or surveyed building the
derails play the predominant role. They are composed in different scales in rhe attempt
to single our the dialogue among the pans in the making of the rexr of rhe building.
Somerim~ the building as a whole is present in the drawing, and generally ir is repre
sented on a minuscule scale, and so ir seems a detail among derails. The origin of the
analytique and its role in the construing of architecture can be t raced back to the tech
nique of graphic representation and composition developed by Piranesi in his etchings
-surveying the Magnific= of Roman architecture. These are a graphic interpretation,
with a stronger Vichian bias, of Carlo Lodoli's understanding of the built environment
as a sum of inadequate derails to be substituted with more appropriate ones.14 Another
form of the analytiqtJL, illustrating the architecture ofltaly, can be found on the back of
Italian lire notes today.
It is impottant to notice that the analytique as grap hic analysis of derails had irs
development in a period in which architects did not have to prepare working drawings
showing the construction of the derails. The drawings carried few if any derails and
dimensions. The designer could be almost entirely d ependent on his craftsmen. Builders
had no need for drawings to show details whose execution was a matter of common
knowledge. Consuuction ofdetails was parceled our among the various tradesmen, who
supplied the necessary knowledge for making them. The same craftsmen who furnished
the information for the [Denis] Diderot and (Jean le Rond] D'Alamberr Encycloptdie
were able to construct the drawing with the exact eye of the artist, and the analytique was
simply the source for the understanding of the ordering role of a single derail in the over
all composition .' 5
Thi:: production of details, as it was established before the development ofthe indus
trial society and motivated by different cultural needs, began ro become problematic in a
predominantly economically motivated society. No longer considered as long-lasting cul
tural and social repositories, buildings came to be viewed as economic investments with
an intentionally planned short existence. Two polar reacrions had developed from the
change that occurred in ' the scope of edifices. One of t he reactions was that the various
building trades no longer inferred the construction of the detail from design drawings.
The details were studied and resolved on the drawing boards. Draftsmanship was substi
tuted for workmanship, and the development of "real details" was replaced by "virtual"
procedures. From this point of view rhe detail was no longer part of the building. The
detail was no longer seen as a joint; instead, it was seen as a production drawing. In an
American Glossary ofBuilding the term "derail" is defined as "the delineation to full size:
or a large scale of any portion of an architecrural design. "'6 A French glossary was even
more precise in this understanding of derail: "Derail: Specification or description of the
work to be performed in the execution of a building. "17 In this interpretation "derails" are
verbal and graphic mean s for controlling the work ofvariable crews ofvocarionless work
ers who are unprepared for rheir own jobs and possibly even financially dishonest.
The second reaction ro rhe change that occurred in rhe rol e ofd erail is the one that
can be: exemplified by the architecture produced by the Arts and Crafts Movement. The
d erail, in this movem ent, was seen as the means for the redempt ion of \Yorkers. The skill
and knowledge of the making of detai ls were given back to the workers. Workmanship
was seen as the sole parameter for the d erails, which in themselves were seen as refine
ment ofbuilding tradition. The knowl edge of derails and ofthe related skills was t he nec
essary means for the architect to practice his profession, since it was hi s task to select the
appropriate workers for the appropriate details.
This duality in the physical production of derail is also found in the mental pro
duction. Using a conceptual analogy, it is possible to define a rchitecture as a system in
which there is a "total architecture," the plot, and a derailed architecture, the tale. The
derailed architecture is based on "the constant process of drawing cxrrasysternatic ele
ments into the realm of the system and of expelling syst ematic dements into the area of
not sysrem ....The stone that the builders of a formed and stabilized system reject for
being, from their poinrof view, superfluous and unnecessary, turns out to be the cor
8
n e rstone of subsequent system. "' From this point of view architecture becomes the art
of appropriate selection ofderails in the devising of the t ale. A plot with the appropriate
details becomes a fully developed and successful "tale."
Architecture as art of the appropriate is the theme of Leon Battista Alberti's
architectural theory. Alberti sees architecture as the art of the selection of appropriate
derails whose result is beauty, which is a meaningful goal. He defines beauty as "the
'concinnity' ofall the derails in the unity to which they belong"; in ocher words, beauty
is the skillful joining of parts by a normative by which nothing can be added, subtract
ed, or altered for the worse. Generally this principle has been interp reted as staring
that a building should be a compl ete and finished whole, a total architecture. Alberti,
. however, does not apply this concept to the acrual edifice, but, rather, to the mental
one.' 9 The joint, that is, the detail, is the place of the meeting of th e mental co nstruing
and of the actual construction. A perfect instance of this union of mental function and
physical representation 1s 1n the fa~ade of Palazzo Rucellai, designed by Alberti in
Florence. Although the fa~ade is incomplete and irs incompleteness is clearly shown, the
d etailed architecture is complete, and nothing can be added or subtracted for the worse.
The grooves of the joints ofthe stone slabs composing the thick veneer of the Florentine
schiacciato (representing the post and beam structure of the three superimposed classical
Orders, related with,arched windows and infilling walls). are the sol ution of the mathe
matical problem set by the relationships existing among the parts of the fas:ade. In many
cases the joints :lle not real o nes, and the shapes of the stones are not as regular as they
appear; Fake grooves were carved in the stone to make the derailed architecture complete
and to offer at the same time its own proof.
Alberti's search for "Beaury" is the setting of a precise relationship between rhe derail
and the attached meaning. Beauty is the result of the process of signification, and concin
nity is the process for achieving it. Concinniry is the correspondence of three basic
requi rements: I) Number, 2) Finishing, 3) Collocation. 10
Number is a system of calculation. "The rechnique of calculation is part of the
technique of house building."'' Numbers in this way are tools for giving meaning. In
architecture there are elements, and, in order to build, it is necessary. to draw numerical
correlation among them. In a rriforium, three arches are correlated to four columns ro
make a serliana. The proof is in the details, and it is expressed in terms of mouldings,
capitals, bases, and keystone. "Numerology," then, is for Alberti a technique for the ..
selection of figures, thereby signalling that the derails are related to memorable shapes
such as the human body or cosmological figures."
Finishing is a mathematical procedure for rhe definicion of the dimensions of the
directions in which the space of architectural objects is articulated. The edges of the tri
dimensional bodies of arch.itect~te are d efined by a system of proportions. Proportion or
"analogy" is the use of rdacions in a measuremenr.'3 An analogical system is a ser of
norms for t he creation and combination of details. A basic measure, or module, is the
norm from which all the lengths, widths, and heights are derived, and any single detail
is measured afrer it. Then all the pares of the building will stand to each other in a direCt
-and intelligible relationship. This relationship stands even when its form does not yet
have a verbalized expression.
Collocation is the composing by place, chat is, the functional placement of the
details. The function in this case not only is limited to the practical and structural
dimensions bur ir embodies, as well, historical and aesthetic dimensions.'"~ The placing
of details, then, is deeply related ro the other two requirementS: numbers and analogies.
The detail in this manner is not defined by scale, bur, rather, the scale is the cool for
conuolling ir.
The geometrical and mathematical construction of the architectural detail is in n o
sense a technical question. The matter should be regarded as fal ling wit hin the ph ilo
sophical problem of the foundation of architecture or geo met ry, and ultima rely with in
the theories of perception.
The processes ofdesig ning, ordering materials, and buildi ng a house are techniques
in the same way geometry is a technique by which the designer, the builder, and the use r
of a house uansform the appropriate sign with a view to predicting the occurrence ofcer
tain events. T his technique (geometry) provides us with a srrucrure for describing the
built world, a conceprual framework into which t he d esigner, the builder, and t he user
can fit thei r empirical experience. G eometry shows how to derive a shape from another
shape by transformation .
ln thi s guise geometry does not state facts, but gives us the fo rms in which to state
facts. It provides us with a linguistic or co nceptual structure for the constructi on and the
construing of a buildin'g. The geometrical st ructures embodied in the architectural
details do not stare faas b ut rather provide a structu re for stati ng facts wit hin a "scale."
T hey give us a way of making comparisons that meaningfully relate visually perceived
architectural details. The notion of the individually p erceived details can be illustrated
wit h the phenomenon of "indi rect vision" as explained by Hermann von Helmholtz:
The eye represents an optical instrument of a very large field o f vision, bur only a smal l
very narro--:ly confined part oftha, field o f vi.< ion produces clear images. T he wh ole field
corresponds to a drawing in w hich the most important part of the whole is carefully ren
der! b uc the surroundi ng is merely ske tched , and sketched the more roughly the fur
t her ir is removed from rhe main object. Th~nks to the mobility of the eye, however, it
15
is possible to examine carefully every point of the visual field in succcssion.
Helmholtz's research o n visual perception persuade d him rhat sensory stimuli only
s upply signs of the presence of architecru re, but do not give us an adequa te understand
ing of it. Such signs, tha t is, the details, acquire a meaning by virtue of which t hey
become a vehicle of knowledge through a long p rocess of association and comparison
16
a nd through a set of geo metric relationships.
The geo metrical relationships embodied in the details in a built environment as well
as in a natural environment set the understanding of the large field of vision. T he geo
metrical relationship or proposition at the base of th e compound pier ofthe High Gothic
architecture expresses in itself every feature of t he imposed superstrucrure. Such rela
tio nships are the results of the transformation in stone of the second requiremen t of
Scholastic writing, of an "arrangement according ro a system of homologous pa rts and
parts of parrs.""7 The details in this way, while forming an indivisible whol e, are indi
vidually perceived and understood .
T he problem of perception of details within the sphere of architectural appropria
tion is stated by Wal,tcr Benjamin:
Buildings are appropriated in a twofold mann er: by usc and by porccption or rather by
touch and sight... .Tactile appropriatio n is accomplished nor so much by attention a.< by
habit. As regards architccrure. habit determines to a large extent even optical reception..a
then wonder
celebration.
14 For a discussion of the origin of the analytiqur in Lodoli's gard en at S. Francesco della
BI BLIOGRAPHY
Accademia O limpica. Carlo Scarpa. Vicenza: 1974.
Alberti, Leon Battista. Dt & Atdificatoria. 1485; repr. Milan: 1966.