• Jim Coddington posted an update 4 years, 10 months ago

    The following lecture will be given at the Institute of Fine Arts at 6:30 on February 4th.
    Tuesday, February 4, 6:30pm – 8:30pm
    Silberberg Lecture
    Title: Digital Autopsy and the Temple of Hera at Olympia: Rethinking the Beginnings of Greek Monumental Architecture
    Speaker: Philip Sapirstein

    About the Lecture: In 2013, I initiated a new study of the Temple of Hera at Olympia, one of the oldest well-preserved Doric buildings from ca. 600 BCE. Although well known since its excavation in the 1870s, the Heraion lacks a comprehensive architectural study meeting modern standards of publication. My recent fieldwork has involved extensive 3D recording based on photogrammetry, implemented with exceptionally high resolution and survey methods that control error within 1 mm throughout the 25 x 55m site. The resulting 3D models have proven indispensable to my investigation of the architectural history of the monument. One of the most important conclusions is that the in situ colonnades are largely original to the building, and not, as formerly believed, the result of piecemeal repairs to what was originally a wooden colonnade. I am currently working on a digital anastylosis of the stone colonnades, using a computer algorithm to restore more than 80 fragments in the blockfields to their original positions. As originals from the first quarter of the sixth century BCE, they attest to not later, piecemeal repairs but rather a wide array of experimental construction techniques in use at the early beginnings of monumental building in Greece. Furthermore, many of the construction methods are only attested in distant places such as Aigina and Syracuse, suggesting that expert masons had traveled to Olympia and collaborated on the construction of the Heraion.

    Please note that seating in the Lecture Hall is on a first-come, first-served basis with RSVP.