Melancholy and Architecture: Interpretations of Aldo Rossi and the San Cataldo Cemetery


San Cataldo Cemetery. Photo by Trevor Patt, via Flickr. CC BY-NC-SA 2.0 license

San Cataldo Cemetery. Photo by Trevor Patt, via Flickr. CC BY-NC-SA 2.0 license

Cemeteries are among the architectural programs with the greatest symbolic value. They suggest rituals, rigor and solemnity while offering some comfort or hospitality, if not for those who bid farewell to their loved ones, at least to “guarantee” a dignified afterlife for those who have passed away. The San Cataldo Cemetery, designed by Aldo Rossi and Gianni Braghieri, fulfills the first part of the previous statement. Partly because the project was not entirely built, austerity and empty spaces predominate. But when considering the proposed project, perhaps the aridity would remain, and the harshness would be felt more forcefully. Composed of buildings with almost abstract, pure shapes, without noble details or cladding, the cemetery project is a good example of Aldo Rossi’s production at the time of its conception, around 1970.

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