
Irene Cazzaro
Irene Cazzaro is currently a research fellow at the IUAV University of Venice and adjunct professor at the Alma Mater Studiorum University of Bologna, where she obtained her PhD in 2023. She is also member of the Laboratory of Image Theories at IUAV University of Venice and she is teaching assistant in the same university for the courses of representation and morphology of artefacts. She conducts studies on morphology, morphogenesis and digital reconstruction in architecture and art history.
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Books by Irene Cazzaro
It contains exercises about lettering and diagrams as well.
Papers by Irene Cazzaro
In this context, numerous initiatives and research projects have emerged with the common objective of systematising and rationalising the various problems identified by scholars. Such projects still tend to remain isolated, lacking a significant impact on the community of potential users. 3D research outputs are not widely applicable, due to the complex prototypes of the software architecture, difficult to apply in a broad sense. Furthermore, the ‘old’ problems still exist, i.e. the traditional approaches - which do not consider a 3D model as a scholarly result, but only an investigative tool - and the reluctance to share these results and the associated procedures. Therefore, an attempt is being made to define the development and evaluation of an applicable methodology for the hypothetical 3D historical reconstruction, based on a shared theoretical approach.
The working method presented here reflects many years of engagement with source-based hypothetical 3D reconstruction of no longer extant or unrealised architecture for teaching and research. Our focus is therefore on a low-threshold, application-oriented method of the Scientific Reference Model (SRM) as a documented and published basic model. The structured SRM represents an important working and knowledge state, which clarifies the essential information about the object, its components, its credibility or extent of hypothesis and copyright. Such SRM is made available for further research, edits and refinement, as well as further derivatives (special applications). Thus SRM represents a findable referential result of a scholarly investigation of a material object that physically no longer exists.