Photogrammetry and light analysis. Interactions in the study of Baroque architecture
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Digital Humanities have given researchers access to new tools to resolve issues that had been inaccessible until now, beyond simply giving formulas to visualize traditional objects with a more up-to-date and attractive appearance. Within this context, this article aims to demonstrate that the combined use of photogrammetry and light analysis gives us a useful tool for resolving issues arising in the historiography of architecture, particular for the Baroque period. In this case, the study focuses exclusively on the use of natural light in religious buildings, without paying particular attention to the use of candles for the time being. To do so, the article focuses on the specific case of the convent church of San Jacinto (Seville), presenting the results obtained by combining the different techniques: measurement-based surveying, photogrammetry and computer light analysis. The results include varying levels of detail that enable each of them to be evaluated. This data has been used to try to provide a response to a long-standing scientific issue: providing a preliminary specification of what has been defined as a cave-shaped space by determining the levels of light in each part of the building. More specifically, an architectural model of the use of natural light has been achieved which, compared to other buildings studied previously, enables new data to be gathered with respect to the illumination of religious buildings in the Middle Ages in Andalusia, which can also be extrapolated to other areas on the Iberian Peninsula and abroad.
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Pedro Luengo, Universidad de Sevilla
Member of the Department of Art History at the Universidad de Sevilla. PhD in Art History from the same institution. He has completed research placements in various international centres, including the San Agustin Museum (Manila) in 2009, the Instituto de Investigaciones (Mexico) in 2010, the European University Institute (Florence) in 2011 and the War Studies Department of King’s College London in 2015 and at Oxford University in 2016. He is also a corresponding researcher at the Além-Mar History Centre of the Universidade Nova de Lisboa, and a member of various research groups in Portugal and Brazil. He has published several articles in Spanish and international journals, including publications as prestigious as Itinerario, Araucaria, Revista de Indias, Imago Mundi and War in History. His key achievements include his contributions to special-focus publications, such as “Intramuros: arquitectura en Manila, 1739-1762” (“Within the walls: Architecture in Manila 1739-1762”, Madrid: Fundación Universitaria Española, 2012), “Manila, plaza fuerte. Ingenieros militares entre Europa, América y Ásia” (“Manila, stronghold – Military Engineers between Europe, the Americas and Asia”, Madrid, CSIC-Ministry of Defence, 2013) and the publication of his book From Colonies to Countries in the North Caribbean. Military Engineers in the Development of Cities and Territories (Newcastle: Cambridge Scholar Publishing, 2016).
Javier Luengo, Universidad Rovira i Virgili
Collaborating researcher at the Institut Català de Paleoecologia Humana i Evolució Social (Catalan Institute of Human Paleo-ecology and Social Evolution) in the area of photogrammetric documentation applied to archaeology. Master in Quaternary Archaeology and Human Evolution (Erasmus Mundus) from the Universitat Rovira i Virgili in Tarragona (Spain) and from the Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle in Paris (National Natural History Museum, France) for the project “Application of photogrammetric techniques for morphometric studies in palaeontological big mammal’s fossils”. Bachelor Degree in History from the Universidad de Sevilla. Bachelor Degree in Violin from the Conservatorio Superior de Música de Sevilla. Director of the Historical and Archaeological Project “El Cuervo de Sevilla” since 2016.
In the professional sphere, his key achievements include becoming the Director of the archaeological and paleontological site of Baza 1 (Granada), as well as his three-dimensional documentation projects in the Sierra de Atapuerca (Burgos), including the Gran Dolina, Galería and Sima del Elefante excavation sites since 2016 and Cueva Fantasma since 2017. He has recently worked on virtual recreation and computational analysis projects in Roman and modern periods.
He is the author of several articles in Spanish journals, key examples of which include his work on improving photogrammetric techniques and virtual recreation applications. In the same field, he wrote a chapter on three-dimensional documentation for the book “Orce: Homininos, hienas, mamuts y otras bestias” (Orce: Hominins, hyenas, mammoths and other beasts”) Sevilla: Junta de Andalucía, 2016.
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