Archigraphiæ. Rationalist Lettering and Architecture in Fascist Rome

Archigraphiæ. Rationalist Lettering and Architecture in Fascist Rome

Letterforms carry messages – in public space, they are powerful propaganda tools. Witness to this fact are the inscriptions placed on display by Emperors to showcase their power across the Roman Empire. During a Summer School at the Swiss Institute in Rome, ECAL MA in Type Design and ISIA Urbino students explored a more recent avatar of this communication tool.

Research project (2018)

During a Summer School at the Swiss Institute in Rome, ECAL MA in Type Design and ISIA Urbino students explored a more recent avatar of this communication tool. During the fascist era in Italy (1922–1943), the rise to power of Benito Mussolini made his revolutionary political party a ruling institution, which had, as its ambition, the creation of an empire modelled on ancient Rome. The visual aesthetic of the Caesars was captured and used by the fascists to position themselves as successors to a glorious tradition. Imagery and photography also played a part in this endeavour, as did architecture and inscription letters. The buildings and monuments of the 1930s frequently display mottos and texts carved in white marble. Latin and Italian were used, and full capitals, in the ancient Roman tradition. While the design of these letters is based on Ancient models, their shapes are definitely modern; sans serif geometric letterforms.

In the first instance, Archigraphiæ sought to collect images of inscriptions on monuments, public buildings, graveyards, street plaques in Rome. Then some of those original designs were digitised to reveal their construction, and the ways in which small elements can be capable of turning a neutral geometrical font into a very Italian-style fascist symbol. By mapping this conspicuous feature of fascist propaganda, the Summer School aimed to deconstruct the mechanisms used to promote political ambitions, and to compare this font with other modernist sans serifs of the time. An analysis of the storytelling behind the use of the letterforms allowed students to develop critical thinking about current (political, commercial, militant) uses of type and lettering.

Main applicants

ECAL/University of Art and Design Lausanne
Matthieu Cortat  (project leader)
Davide Fornari  (project leader)
Jonathan Pierini (project leader)

Research team

Lecturers and researchers
Chiara Barbieri
Gianluca Camillini
Pippo Ciorra
Emilio Gentile
Alessandra Tarquini
Paul Shaw
Carlo Vinti

Assistants
Leonardo Azzolini
Simon Mager

Students

ECAL MA Type Design
Quentin Coulombier , So Hee Kim , Jin Lee Kyung , Dávid Molnár Luca Pellegrini , Maharani Putri , Shuhui Shi , Benedek Takács , Mingoo Yoon

ECAL MA PhotographieAlina Frieske

ISIA Urbino MA in Communication, Design and Publishing
Gianluca Ciancaglini, Alberto Malossi, David Mozzetta, Giuseppe Romagno

Period

september 2018

Supported by

ECAL/University of Art and Design Lausanne
ISIA Urbino
Istituto Svizzero di Roma

Dissemination

Summer school 
Archigraphiæ. Rationalist Lettering and Architecture in Fascist Rome (1921–1943): a Fieldwork, Rome, Istituto Svizzero, September 2–9, 2018.

Talks

  • Emilio Gentile, Politica di massa in regime totalitario, Rome, Istituto Svizzero, September 3, 2018.
  • Chiara Barbieri, Graphic design and designers under Fascism: education, practice and exhibitions, Rome, Istituto Svizzero, September 3, 2018.
  • Carlo Vinti, Modernist and traditionalist typography in Fascist Italy, Rome, Istituto Svizzero, September 4, 2018.
  • Pippo Ciorra, Gli architetti di Zevi. Storia e controstoria dell’architettura italiana 1944–2000, Rome, MAXXI, September 4, 2018.

Exhibition
Archigraphiæ. Rationalist Lettering and Architecture in Fascist Rome (1921–1943): a Fieldwork
, Rome, Istituto Svizzero, September 8, 2018.

Publication
Matthieu Cortat, Davide Fornari, Archigraphiæ. Rationalist Lettering and Architecture in Fascist Rome / Architettura e iscrizioni razionaliste nella Roma fascista, Renens: ECAL 2020 (contributions by Chiara Barbieri, Gianluca Camillini, Joëlle Comé, Jonathan Pierini, Paul Shaw, Alessandra Tarquini, Carlo Vinti).

Spreads from Archigraphiæ. Rationalist Lettering and Architecture in Fascist Rome / Architettura e iscrizioni razionaliste nella Roma fascista , edited by Matthieu Cortat, Davide Fornari (eds.). © ECAL / Jimmy Rachez
Spreads from Archigraphiæ. Rationalist Lettering and Architecture in Fascist Rome / Architettura e iscrizioni razionaliste nella Roma fascista , edited by Matthieu Cortat, Davide Fornari (eds.). © ECAL / Jimmy Rachez
Spreads from Archigraphiæ. Rationalist Lettering and Architecture in Fascist Rome / Architettura e iscrizioni razionaliste nella Roma fascista , edited by Matthieu Cortat, Davide Fornari (eds.). © ECAL / Jimmy Rachez
Spreads from Archigraphiæ. Rationalist Lettering and Architecture in Fascist Rome / Architettura e iscrizioni razionaliste nella Roma fascista , edited by Matthieu Cortat, Davide Fornari (eds.). © ECAL / Jimmy Rachez
Spreads from Archigraphiæ. Rationalist Lettering and Architecture in Fascist Rome / Architettura e iscrizioni razionaliste nella Roma fascista , edited by Matthieu Cortat, Davide Fornari (eds.). © ECAL / Jimmy Rachez
Spreads from Archigraphiæ. Rationalist Lettering and Architecture in Fascist Rome / Architettura e iscrizioni razionaliste nella Roma fascista , edited by Matthieu Cortat, Davide Fornari (eds.). © ECAL / Jimmy Rachez
Spreads from Archigraphiæ. Rationalist Lettering and Architecture in Fascist Rome / Architettura e iscrizioni razionaliste nella Roma fascista , edited by Matthieu Cortat, Davide Fornari (eds.). © ECAL / Jimmy Rachez
Spreads from Archigraphiæ. Rationalist Lettering and Architecture in Fascist Rome / Architettura e iscrizioni razionaliste nella Roma fascista , edited by Matthieu Cortat, Davide Fornari (eds.). © ECAL / Jimmy Rachez
Spreads from Archigraphiæ. Rationalist Lettering and Architecture in Fascist Rome / Architettura e iscrizioni razionaliste nella Roma fascista , edited by Matthieu Cortat, Davide Fornari (eds.). © ECAL / Jimmy Rachez
Spreads from Archigraphiæ. Rationalist Lettering and Architecture in Fascist Rome / Architettura e iscrizioni razionaliste nella Roma fascista , edited by Matthieu Cortat, Davide Fornari (eds.). © ECAL / Jimmy Rachez

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Palazzo della Civiltà Italiana, also known as Palazzo della Civiltà del Lavoro, or simply Colosseo Quadrato (Square Colosseum), at EUR in Rome, designed by architects Giovanni Guerrini, Ernesto Bruno Lapadula and Mario Romano in 1937, stared in 1939 and completed in 1953.  © ECAL / Matthieu Cortat
Statue in the surroundings of Palazzo della Civiltà Italiana, Rome.  © ECAL / Matthieu Cortat
Façade du Palazzo della Civiltà Italiana, Rome.  © ECAL / Matthieu Cortat
One of the numerous statues on the way to the Stadio dei Marmi (Stadium of the Marbles) at Foro Italico, formerly Foro Mussolini, Rome. © ECAL / Matthieu Cortat

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The lettering of the fountain in Piazza Mazzini, Rome. By Raffaele De Vico and Ermenegildo Luppi, 1927–1930.  © ECAL / Dávid Molnár
ROMA CAPUT MUNDI (Rome Capital of the World). Detail of a sculpture on the ground floor of the Palazzo della Civiltà Italiana.  © ECAL / Matthieu Cortat
Facade of the Faculty of Letters and Philosophy, Sapienza University, Rome. By Marcello Piacentini, 1935.  © ECAL / Mingoo Yoon
© ECAL / Ondřej Báchor

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Inscription on a tombstone in the Verano Cemetery, Rome.  © ECAL / Matthieu Cortat
Relief lettering in Piazza Augusto Imperatore, Rome, carved in 1940 to celebrate Mussolini’s liberation of the Mausoleum of Augustus “from the darkness of the ages”. The design owes a great deal to Gill Sans (1928).  © ECAL / Matthieu Cortat

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Opening talk by Emilio Gentile at Istituto Svizzero, Rome.  © ECAL / Alina Frieske
Talk by Chiara Barbieri at Istituto Svizzero, Rome. © ECAL / Alina Frieske
Talk by Carlo Vinti at Istituto Svizzero, Rome.  © ECAL / Alina Frieske
Pictures of Ciorra’s talk.  © ECAL / Alina Frieske

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Installation views of the findings exhibited at Istituto Svizzero, Rome.  © ECAL / Alina Frieske
Installation views of the findings exhibited at Istituto Svizzero, Rome. © ECAL / Alina Frieske

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