restitution of the iconographic
repertory, Of which our monuments are
very rich, gives us a lot of drawings so
beautiful as, for certain reasons,
useless (Fig.l). The synthesis in this
case is sclerosed because it loose
important signs. In this way we are
bounded to run again through the phase of
data collection or to go back to the
object: the photography results to be a
privileged vehicle, if some well defined
condition are respected, of infinite
signs that, only in a second phase will
be decoded and analized. Also the
photography permits a natural sinthesys,
and than the digital photo (Fig.2).
This is more meaningful if we think to
the incredible richness of the
iconographic and decorative patrimony
that establishes a new object of
research. With these studies now we have
the need to trasmit the material and
formal informations, of which the
building is the most important support.
The static-structural stability is the
"condicio sine qua non" to the maintance
of these painted and mosaic surfaces.
We remember the floor of St.Marcus, where
the knowledge of the geometry
charaterized by an undulating trend,
caused by structural movements, is
strictly correlated to the mosaical
covering and to the knowledge of the
state of deterioration visible on the
parts of the floor decorated with scenes
or with geometric drawings.
Therefore it is not possible a clear
division between the structure (Brumana
R., Crippa B., Vassena G., 1990) and its
surface, more or less formalized. Infact
the figure becomes an index of the
condition of the structure. Therefore
these are new signs that can be added to
those ones contained in the shapes in
whom the surfaces are visible.
There is so the need of a systematic
basin of varied informations, numbers,
drawings. To them are added indexes of
evaluation of the state of conservation,
analysis and interventions.
The process of computerization has open
even in this branch a lot of
possibilities, from the control of the
traditional drawing to the research in
the field of digital images.
The electronic archivies re different:
those ones that collected in a vectorial
form the various restitutions made with
lines, the drawings already realized and
only later the drawings acquired on an
informatic support; those ones that
collect the photographic images in a
raster format (digital images) (Fig.2).
Now we are studying the positioning and
the use of the images in the geometric
three-dimensional space of the
architectural building.
2 = THREE-DIMENSIONAL SURFACES AND
DIGITAL IMAGES
The planning of the research of the
cataloguing and of the administration of
the images on one hand, and of the
representation of three-dimensional
surfaces, essential support to the
projection, on the other hand, proceed
together.
For the representation of the surfaces,
we are looking for the possibility to
arrive at a semiautomatic or guided
process for the generation of surfaces
with DTM. In architecture the surfaces
are usually discontinuous. This
characteristic is a big handicap for the
automation that is usually working, with
some exceptions, to the terrestrial
ground considered as a continuous surface
that grows up in the direction of the
third dimension. The architecture is also
characterized by some "hidden points”.
For this reason there is the need to
change the points of taken and of
restitution, in the way to make visible
those hidden parts.
Let us think to a compex structure like a
church. From this point of view some
different applications have already been
done (Brumana R., Crippa B., Vassena G.,
1990) but it is interesting to point out
an interesting experience.
2.1 AN EXPERIENCE ON A SCULPTURE: THE
DAVID
We are speaking of the "David", the
"Gigante" as was suddenly called the work
of Michelangelo that was begun on the
1501.
The metric surveies were made using of
the technic of close range photogrammetry
obtaining the realization of the
traditional graphic restitution and
numerical one with lines or contourn
lines. Such restitutions allows to
associate directly into the computer the
observation already given by the
restorers through visual analysis and
those ones given by the diagnostic
analysis, in the way to obtain some
specific thematic.mapper.
Then using of the total photographic
covering of the statue obtained with the
photograms, we arrived at the acquisition
of three-dimensional coordinates of
points and of lines of discontinuity
using an analytical stereoplotter.
Therefore a special data processing,
Still in a testing phase, for the
evaluation and the manipulation of the
three-dimensional solid models permetted
the definition of a direct representation
of the statue (Fig.3).