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Imagine Math pp 273–280Cite as

De divina proportione: From a Renaissance Treatise to a Multimedia Work for Theatre

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Abstract

The theatrical work De Divina Proportione, which made its debut in Urbino in 2009 — the year which celebrated the five-hundredth anniversary of the print publication of the book by Luca Pacioli — and performed again with success during the Ravenna Festival of 2011, is a multimedia spectacle with live music, dance and video projections inspired by — indeed, taken from — the famous text of 1509. Pacioli’s text is not only considered to be a watershed of scientific knowledge of the day, but one which in many respects is interdisciplinary. It was precisely in virtue of the work’s interdisciplinary nature that we developed the idea of bringing an ancient mathematical text to the theatre in the form of a musical work in a modern key. In the very first pages of the treatise we come upon an interesting declaration: the author explains at the outset that his study will be useful and necessary for all ‘perspicacious and curious minds’ interested in philosophy, perspective, painting, sculpture, architecture, music and other kinds of mathematics.1 Where do we begin, what should we take from a five-hundred year old treatise to construct a musical work for the present day?

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Notes

  1. 1.

    Opera a tutti gli ingegni perspicaci e curiosi, ove ciascun studioso di Philosophia, Perspectiva, Pic-tura, Sculptura, Architectura, Musica e altre Matematiche, suavissima, subtile e admirabile doctrina conseguirà e delectarassi con varie questione de secretissima Scientia’ [Luca Pacioli, De Divina Proportione, Venezia, 1509].

  2. 2.

    C. Wright, Dufay’s ‘Nuper rosarum flores’, King Solomon’s Temple, and the Veneration of the Virgin. Journal of the American Musicological Society, vol. 47, no. 3, 1994, pp. 395–427 and 429–441 (46-page article).

  3. 3.

    C.W. Warren, Brunelleschi’s Dome and Dufay’s Motet. In: The Musical Quarterly, vol. 59, no. 1, 1973, pp. 92–105 (14-page article).

References

  1. C. Wright, Dufay’s ‘Nuper rosarum flores’, King Solomon’s Temple, and the Veneraton of the Virgin. Journal of the American Musicological Society, vol. 47, no.3, 1994, pp. 395–427 and 429–441 (46-page article).

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  2. C.W. Warren, Brunelleschi’s Dome and Dufay’s Motet. In: The Musical Quarterly, vol. 59, no.1, 1973, pp. 92–105 (14-page article).

    Article  Google Scholar 

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Sorini, S. (2012). De divina proportione: From a Renaissance Treatise to a Multimedia Work for Theatre. In: Emmer, M. (eds) Imagine Math. Springer, Milano. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-88-470-2427-4_26

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