Il ruolo della luce nell’architettura ecclesiastica di committenza angioina in Italia meridionale
The church built between the end of the 13th and the beginning of the 14th century in southern Italy according to the patronage of the Angevins
are a result of the interaction between the culture of transalpine Europe and local tradition. The architectural production, especially in Naples
and inland, reached its peak in realizations characterized by a clear simplification of the decoration and structure in favor of an adaptation
to the existing construction methods: for example, the absence of large windows reduced to single or double lancet windows open between the
buttresses and on the smooth surfaces of the perimeter walls. The contribution aims to investigate how much the absence of large glass surfaces
is attributable to a static need or rather whether this peculiar solution responds to a precise aesthetic will. It has already been hypothesized in
more than one circumstance that the impossibility of proceeding with larger openings was visually compensated by the predisposition of frescoes
depicting open-air landscapes in order to guarantee a real or drawn “lux continua”.