Digitizing a complex urban panorama in the Renaissance: The 1500 bird’s-eye view of Venice by Jacopo de’ Barbari

This study surveys the fundamental technical approaches adopted by Renaissance artist Jacopo de’ Barbari in drafting his 1500 bird’s-eye view of Venice, as well as the ideological and military implications that accompanied the map’s production. In doing so, the authors point out some fundamental parallels between the masterpiece of Renaissance map-making and the current computer-supported digital representations of urban spaces. The historical sources indicate that de’ Barbari’s map was a composite image stitched together from numerous partial views; such partial views were already “digitized” and consequently mechanically reproduced and manipulated into one synoptic image whose sheer size and amount of detail was able to evoke in viewers an experience of virtual reality. Ultimately, the study challenges the rhetoric of newness that dominates current media studies by emphasizing the need to separate what is genuinely new in our everyday experiences of media from what has been seen before.

[1]  Lee Wilson Circa 1492: Art in the Age of Exploration , 1992 .

[2]  W. Singer,et al.  Deceptions and Illusions: Five Centuries of Trompe L'Oeil Painting , 2002 .

[3]  L. Nuti The Perspective Plan in the Sixteenth Century: The Invention of a Representational Language , 1994 .

[4]  Paul Hockings,et al.  The Visual Culture Reader , 2013 .

[5]  J. Schulz Jacopo de' Barbari's View of Venice: Map Making, City Views, and Moralized Geography before the Year 1500 , 1978 .

[6]  M. Holly The psychology of perspective and renaissance art , 1989 .

[7]  Francis Henry Taylor,et al.  The National Gallery of Art , 1941 .

[8]  Bronwen Wilson The World in Venice: Print, the City, and Early Modern Identity , 2005 .

[9]  J. D. Mellick Painting and Sculpture , 1973 .

[10]  Giorgio Vasari,et al.  Lives of the most eminent painters, sculptors, and architects : translated from the Italian of G. V. with notes ... by Mrs. Jonathan Foster , 2022 .

[11]  Albrecht Dürer,et al.  The Writings of Albrecht Durer , 1960 .

[12]  J. Maier Mapping Past and Present: Leonardo Bufalini's Plan of Rome (1551) , 2007 .

[13]  A. H.,et al.  The Science of Art , 1897, Nature.

[14]  P. Burke,et al.  War and Society in Renaissance Europe 1450–1620 , 1986 .

[15]  J. Peters Helmholtz, Edison, and Sound History , 2020, Memory Bytes.

[16]  Luisa Doldi,et al.  The Virtual Window: From Alberti to Microsoft , 2007 .

[17]  David Landau,et al.  The Renaissance print : 1470-1550 , 1995 .

[18]  Juraj Kittler TOO BIG TO FAIL , 2012 .

[19]  J. Ackerman,et al.  The life of Brunelleschi , 1970 .

[20]  M. Walzer On the Role of Symbolism in Political Thought , 1967 .

[21]  P. Brown Venice and antiquity : the Venetian sense of the past , 1996 .

[22]  Deborah Howard Venice as a Dolphin: Further Investigations into Jacopo de' Barbari's View , 1997 .

[23]  E. Panofsky Perspective as symbolic form , 1991 .

[24]  Benjamin Peters,et al.  And lead us not into thinking the new is new: a bibliographic case for new media history , 2009, New Media Soc..

[25]  Juliane Jung,et al.  The Practice Of Everyday Life , 2016 .