The Construction in Progress of a Private Archive
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.26375/disegno.10.2022.13Abstract
A few years ago, from an idea born in 2015 on the occasion of a specific study on the professional activity of women architects in Palermo [1], Dacia and Sabina Di Cristina, daughters of the architect and university professor Luciana Natoli (fig. 1), born in 1936 and passed away too early, in 1978, at the age of 42, started to ‘build’ their mother’s archive.
Natoli’s young age might suggest a modest size of the archive; in fact, the opposite is absolutely the case.
It was in fact the sheer quantity of rolls, files, heliographic copies, drawings on tracing paper and sketch paper, photographs, correspondence, books and magazines that for so many years prevented her daughters from ordering this great mass of content. [read more]
References
Gelardi, E. (2016). Luciana Natoli. La Teoria e il Progetto. Graduation thesis in Architecture LM4CU, supervisor Prof. Francesco Maggio. University of Palermo.
Gregotti, V. (1966). Il territorio dell’architettura. Feltrinelli: Milano.
Natoli, L. (1960). Antiquarium nella zona di Segesta. Graduation thesis in Architecture, supervisors Prof. Edoardo Caracciolo, Prof. Luigi Epifanio, Gino Levi Montalcini, Domenico Lo Cascio. University of Palermo.
Natoli, L. (1964). Edoardo Caracciolo, primo urbanista siciliano. In Quaderno n. 6 della Facoltà di Architettura di Palermo, pp. 7-21.
Natoli, L. (1965). Realtà dell’architettura. Aspetti e momenti di un’esperienza. Palermo: Tip. Lo Monaco.
Natoli, L. (1973). Un parco archeologico come occasione di Loisir e di cultura. In Sicilia, No. 73, pp. 73-82.
Rossi, A. (1966). L’architettura della città. Padova: Marsilio.
Spadaro, M.A. (2012). Le signore dell’architettura. Luciana Natoli. In Per, No. 34, pp. 8-10.
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2022 diségno
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.