Go to Content 1 Go to Home 2 Go to Navigation 3 Go to Search 4 Go to Sitemap 5
Abrir menu principal de navegação
Ministério das Relações Exteriores
Most searched terms
  • imposto de renda
  • inss
  • assinatura
  • cnh social
  • mei
Most searched terms
  • imposto de renda
  • inss
  • assinatura
  • Structure
    • Office of the Minister of Foreign Affairs
    • General Secretariat for Foreign Affairs
    • Secretariat for Latin America and the Caribbean
    • Secretariat for Europe and North America
    • Secretariat for Africa and the Middle East
    • Secretariat for Asia and the Pacific
    • Secretariat for Economic and Financial Affairs
    • Secretariat for Multilateral Political Affairs
    • Secretariat for Trade Promotion, Science, Technology, Innovation and Culture
    • Secretariat for Brazilian Communities Abroad and Consular and Legal Affairs
    • Secretariat for Climate, Energy and Environment
    • Secretariat for Administrative Management
    • Rio Branco Institute
  • Subjects
    • Bilateral Relations
      • Americas
      • Middle East, Europe and Africa
      • Asia, the Pacific and Russia
      • All countries
    • Consular services
    • COP 30
    • Culture and Education
      • Educational themes
    • Economic and Commercial Foreign Policy
      • Agribusiness Promotion
      • Barriers to trade
      • International Financial, Tax and Investment Agenda
      • Foreign Negotiations Agenda
      • International Economic Organizations
      • International trade
    • Human Rights and Social Issues
      • Human Rights
    • International Cooperation
      • Brazilian Cooperation Agency
      • Brazilian Humanitarian Cooperation
      • Educational Cooperation
      • Sports Cooperation
      • Technical Cooperation
    • International Mechanisms
      • Inter-Regional Mechanisms
      • Regional Integration
    • International Peace and Security
      • Disarmament And Non-Proliferation
      • Maintenance And Consolidation Of Peace
      • Other Topics
    • Itamaraty Palace
      • Historical Archive
      • Public tours
    • Protocol
      • Diplomatic Corps List
      • International organisms
      • National Order Of The Southern Cross
      • Order of precedence of the Heads of Mission accredited to the Brazilian government
      • Order Of Rio Branco
      • Protocol
    • Science, Technology and Innovation
      • Innovation Diplomacy
      • Cooperation in Science, Technology and Innovation
      • Science, Technology and Innovation Sections (SECTECs)
      • Mapping of Innovation-Promoting Environments
    • Sustainable Development and the Environment
      • Sustainable Development
      • Environment and climate change
    • Treaties
  • Access to information
    • About Us
      • The Ministry
      • Minister of Foreign Affairs and other authorities
    • Frequently Asked Questions
      • Itamaraty and the Foreign Service Careers
      • Assistance to Brazilians abroad
      • International Treaties
      • Other themes
    • Administrative Management
      • Work At Itamaraty
      • Ethics committee at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs
  • Content centers
    • Speeches, Articles and Interviews
      • President of the Federative Republic of Brazil
      • Vice President of the Federative Republic of Brazil
      • Minister of Foreign Affairs
      • Secretary General of Foreign Affairs
      • Secretaries and other diplomats
      • Other high ranking officials
    • Statements and other documents
    • Social Media
      • Facebook
      • Flickr
      • Instagram
      • X - English
      • Youtube
  • Contact us
    • Contact Us
    • Press Area
      • Press Area
      • Official Portrait of the Minister of Foreign Affairs
      • Press Releases
      • Press accreditation
      • Press Office
      • Contacts
  • GOV.BR
    • Services
      • Search services by
        • Categories
        • Departments
        • States
      • Services by target audience
        • Citizens
        • Companies
        • Departments and Public Entities
        • Other segments (NGOs, social organizations, etc)
    • Application Gallery
    • Navigation
      • Acessibility
      • Sitemap
    • Government of Brazil
      • Latest News
        • 2021
        • 2022
Useful Links
  • Application Gallery
  • Get involved
  • Application Gallery
  • Get involved
Você está aqui: Home Subjects Itamaraty Palace Events and exhibitions Seminar "Palaces - Spatial Expression of Political Power "
Info

Seminar "Palaces - Spatial Expression of Political Power "

Share by Facebook Share by Twitter Share by LinkedIn Share by WhatsApp link to Copy to Clipboard
Published in Feb 21, 2020 07:52 PM Updated in Mar 13, 2020 04:00 PM

 Itamaraty Palace, 19-20 October 2017

[ Cliquez ici pour la documentation en français ]

The Alexandre de Gusmão Foundation and the Commission on the 50th anniversary of the Itamaraty Palace (RE50) held, on October 19 and 20, 2017, the international seminar "Palaces: Spatial Expression of Political Power", at the Itamaraty Palace, in Brasilia.

The event aimed to discuss palaces as an architectural and social phenomenon, based on the analysis of the construction program of palaces in different periods and political systems, from Versailles to the headquarters of international organizations.

The first session was dedicated to examining a few palace buildings from three perspectives (symbolic, social and functional). In the second session, the discussion expanded to the relationship between palace and polis, as the center of power decisions and the stage and symbol of the game of forces of the political body that invests it. A third session addressed palace interiors, works of art and furniture.

In the fourth session, the definition of palace and the methodological approaches that allowed the inclusion of palace as an architectural, social and aesthetic phenomenon were discussed. This session also presented the experiente of the Research Center of the Chateau de Versailles, which studies the seat of the French monarchy in the 17th and 18th centuries through a multidisciplinary approach, ranging from architectural studies to musicology.

The last session was dedicated to a discussion about the future of palaces. New technologies and new forms of communication, based on the immateriality of image and the speed and informality of virtual networks, bring about important changes in the form of representation of state power. The ceremonies are no longer organized geared to the participants, but to meet the imperatives of photography and television, which bring together the official power and the public. The aim is no longer to impose the reverential fear, but to provide for a charismatic approach between the leader and the people. These transformations bring about important changes not only in the spatial functioning of the palaces, but also in their own function within the symbolic apparatus of the State.

Read the seminar concept paper here.


SEMINAR PROGRAM

OCTOBER 19, 2017

OPENING SESSION

THE ARCHITECTURAL PROGRAMS OF PALACES, REPRESENTATION OF POWER AND NATIONAL IDENTITY

Introduction
The architecture of Itamaraty Palace  (Eduardo Rossetti)
Versailles, un lieu pour l’absolutisme (Gérard Sabatier)
Sites of Might : Vision and Ambition in Ankara’s Presidential Palaces (Zeynep Kezer)

THE PALACE IN THE POLIS

Introduction
The original palaces of Brasilia (Élcio Gomes da Silva)
The palace and the polis – Fatehpur Sikri and Chandigarh (Kazi Ashraf)
Spaces of Diplomacy in the Americas: too much or not enough? (Fernando Lara)
In Search of Architectural Definition(s) of “Palace” in Africa (Nnamdi Elleh)

THE INTERIORS OF PALACES – REPRESENTATION OF POLITICAL AUTHORITY AND NATIONAL IDENTITY

Palatial furniture – the case of Itamaraty Palace (Heitor Granafei)
The politics of Furniture in Post-War interiors (Fredie Floré)
Art in Itamaraty Palace - symbol of identity (Graça Ramos)

FOR A DEFINITION OF PALACES

Modernism and monumentality (Carlos Eduardo Comas)
The experience of the Centre de Recherches du Château de Versailles (CRCV) (Gérard Sabatier)
Precedents and composition in Palatial Architecture on the second half of the 19th century (Pedro Paulo Palazzo)

THE FUTURE OF PALACES

Introduction
The Future of Palaces in the Age of New Technologies and New Media (Alan Marques)
Palaces as Modern Heritage (Andrey Schlee)


  

11H00 – OPENING SESSION

 

12H00 – BREAK

14H00 – THE ARCHITECTURAL PROGRAMS OF PALACES, REPRESENTATION OF POWER AND NATIONAL IDENTITY

Introduction

The architecture of Itamaraty Palace

Eduardo Rossetti
University of Brasilia

 

Versailles, un lieu pour l’absolutisme

Gérard Sabatier
Centre de Recherches du Château de Versailles / University of Grenoble

Sites of Might : Vision and Ambition in Ankara’s Presidential Palaces

Zeynep Kezer
University of Newcastle

16H00 – THE PALACE IN THE POLIS

Introduction

The Original Palaces of Brasilia

Élcio Gomes da Silva
Brazilian Chamber of Deputies / University of Brasilia

The Palace and the Polis - Fatehpur Sikri and Chandigarh

Kazi Ashraf
Bengal Institute of Architecture, Landscapes and Settlements

 

Spaces of Diplomacy in the Americas: too much or not enough?

Fernando Lara
Federal University of Minas Gerais / University of Texas

In Search of Architectural Definition(s) of “Palace” in Africa

Nnamdi Elleh
Author of “African Architecture: Evolution and Transformation”, “Architecture and Power in Africa”, and “Architecture and Power in Nigeria”

Debate and closing of first session

 

  

OCTOBER 20, 2017

11H30 – THE INTERIORS OF PALACES – REPRESENTATION OF POLITICAL AUTHORITY AND NATIONAL IDENTITY

Palatial furniture – the case of Itamaraty Palace

Heitor Granafei
Ministry of Foreign Affairs - Brazil

The politics of Furniture in Post-War interiors

Freddie Floré
University of Leuven

 

Art in Itamaraty Palace - symbol of identity

Graça Ramos
Author of "Itamaraty Palace - the architecture of diplomacy"

 

13H00 – BREAK

14H00 – FOR A DEFINITION OF PALACES

Modernism and monumentality

Carlos Eduardo Comas
University of Rio Grande do Sul

The experience of the Centre de Recherches du Château de Versailles (CRCV)

Gérard Sabatier
Centre de Recherches du Château de Versailles / University of Grenoble

Precedents and composition in Palatial Architecture on the second half of the 19th century

Pedro Paulo Palazzo
University of Brasília

 

16H00 – THE FUTURE OF PALACES

Moderator: Guilherme Conduru
Director of the Museum of History and Diplomacy – Ministry of External Relations

Introduction

 

The Future of Palaces in the Age of New Technologies and New Media

Alan Marques
UNICEUB/Photographer

 

Palaces as Modern Heritage

Andrey Schlee
National Institute of Historic and Artistic Heritage (IPHAN, Brazil)

 

OPEN DEBATE

  


CONCEPT PAPER

Palaces: spatial expression of political power

Brasília, 19-20 October 2017

All political power which is structured and established in a capital city is exercised from some form of palatial building.

According to Norbert Elias, all the social units or forms of human integration can be characterized by spatial arrangements, of which they are the tangible representationi. To understand palaces is, thus, to understand the organization and exercising of political power, by means of one of its most concrete symbols.

As an architectural category and social phenomenon, however, the palace has not been studied to a sufficient extent – and that was particularly the case in the 20th century.

Academic literature tends to approach these buildings in the context of discussions about the relations between architecture and power – be it political, economic, religious or ideological power. Little distinction is made, in general, between palaces, castles, citadels, monuments, temples, noble residences and – in the present day – museums, administrative or commercial buildings, or any other building that serves a representative purpose or whose large dimensions do not derive from strictly functional needs.

Moreover, under the influence of egalitarian and functionalist spirit of 20th century modernism, as well as of issues of identity stemming from the process of decolonization and from the traumatic integration of entire populations into the global economy and the modern State model, analyses often drift into normative and evaluative considerations about (in)authenticity, (in)human scale, gratuitousness, ostentation, universality versus localism, traditionalism versus modernism, in a quest for the just measure in the expression of power and national identity in architecture. This is apparent, for example, in the difficulties international architecture critique experiences in approaching the urban project of Brasilia.

Such considerations do little to help us achieve an effective understanding of this particular category of building – one that is ubiquitous in our political systems and which, notwithstanding its symbolic qualities, fulfills very concrete functions, providing spaces for work, meetings, shared meals, artistic presentations and, last but not least, for living space.

A palace, however, is not an office building or a convention centre, even if those can also be of monumental dimensions.

One of the elements that makes palaces unique is what might be called their triple architectural program:

a)   The first, of a symbolic nature, determines the grandiose scale, the richness and symbolic value of its artistic collection and of its interiors, and its location in the urban setting.

b)  The second, of a social nature, stems from by the grand political rituals and the minute daily social-distinction mechanisms that develop around political authority: the many ceremonial and security concerns that restrict access to the ruler by means of all kinds of spatial access-limiting devices, like private passageways, guardrooms our secretaries’ rooms, - or conversely, public image considerations that request large halls, balconies, staircases, etc.

c)   The third is the architectural program itself, commissioned by the ruler or proposed by the architect, and which involves the functional aspects of the palace.

Understanding how a palace functions spatially, therefore, is inseparable from understanding its symbolic weight and the social-distinction mechanisms rites practised by its dwellers.

In the same way, the interiors of the palace are subject to symbolic and ceremonial constraints. Works of art, many of which are integrated into the structure of the building, perform not only a decorative function but also communicate values and ideals, and interpret – or even rewrite – the history and identity of the body politic.

The role of furniture is to set the stage for public ceremonies or ritualized private gatherings, distribute the participants appropriately across the physical space and induce their bodies into upright positions. In the palace environment, daily actions such as speaking or remaining silent, sitting or standing, approaching or be approached, entering or leaving, become signs of political power.

A promising starting point for a methodology for the study of palaces is provided by some of the studies of Renaissance and Early Modern buildings that analyse architecture alongside the social life that took place within the palace walls (M. Baillie - Etiquette and the Planning of the State Apartments in Baroque Palaces; Monique Chatenet - La Cour de France au XVIème siècle: vie sociale et architecture; Public Buildings in Early Modern Europe; Gérard Sabatier - Le Palais d’État en Europe, de la Renaissance au Grand Siècle; Lieux de pouvoir et résidences royales en France, XVème - XVIIème siècles)ii.

In such instances, an in-depth knowledge of the social life of the time is essential because, with the passage of time and changes in habits, rooms lose their original function and appear arbitrary to a modern observer. It suffices to remember that 17th-century sovereigns would grant audiences and hold meetings in their bedrooms.

When it comes to modern palaces, temporal and geographical proximity tends to hide the fact that the social-distinction political rites that determine how these buildings function, in spatial terms, continue to be restricted to a privileged few. 

The seminar ‘Palaces: spatial expression of political power’ proposes a discussion of the palaces as an architectural and social phenomenon, taking as its starting point analyses of palatial buildings built in different eras and under different political systems, from Versailles to the headquarters of international organizations.

The first session will be devoted to the examination of a number of palatial buildings from the perspective of the aforementioned triple program (symbolic, social and functional). In the second session the discussion will be extended to the relationship between the palace and the polis, as a stage and symbol for the debate and decision-making process of the body politic. The third session will focus on palatial interiors – their works of art and their furniture. 

The fourth session will be devoted to a discussion of how a palace is defined, and to methodological approaches that contemplate the palace as an architectural, social and aesthetic phenomenon. This session will look at the experiences of the Palace of Versailles Research Centre, which takes a multidisciplinary approach, ranging from architectural studies to musicology, to studying the seat of the French monarchy in the 17th and 18th centuries.

The last session will discuss the future of palaces. New technologies and new forms of communication, based on the immateriality of the image and the speed and informality of virtual networks, bring about important changes in the way the power of the State is represented. Ceremonies are no longer organized around the actual participants but instead serve the imperatives of photographers and television, which bring the ruler close to the viewer. The aim is no longer to inspire awe but to eliminate the distance between the leader and the population through the projection of charisma. These transformations have brought about important changes not only in the spatial functioning of palaces but also in the role the palaces themselves perform within the symbolic apparatus of the State.

The stating point for the debates will be the project for Itamaraty Palace, the headquarters of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs that was conceived by Oscar Niemeyer in 1958 when Brasilia took over the mantle of capital city from Rio de Janeiro. Its architectural program and the history of the project illustrate many questions of the problematics of the palace.

The program of Itamaraty Palace is inseparable of the three traditional roles of the diplomat: to represent their country, to negotiate, and to inform. In performing those three functions, diplomacy alternates between the strict protocol of formal situations and the creation of informal situations of interaction that allow for the exchange of information and ideas and the advancement of negotiation processes, in a less structured but no less productive way. The project is also inseparable from Brazil’s history: in the 1960s, the country experienced a period of accelerated industrialization, a higher international profile for its arts and culture, and the diversification and intensification of its diplomatic agenda.

The Brazilian diplomatic corps is a permanent bureaucracy with a strong institutional culture. The plans for the Palace were discussed in detail with Oscar Niemeyer and the more than 20 artists and designers involved in the project. Itamaraty Palace in Brasilia was thus conceived as a ceremonial space aimed at representing a nation undergoing accelerated processes of modernization and, on the international stage, ascension. It was designed to serve the permanent objective of Brazilian foreign policy – projecting the country abroad, while also serving the operational requirements of state protocol and providing Brazil’s diplomats with environments in which to interact at various different levels of formality. Brazilian diplomacy has shaped, and today is shaped by, the spatial configurations of its headquarters, a symbiotic relationship in which use and structure are mutually reinforcing and mutually legitimizing.

_____________________________

i  Not all the social units or integrating forms of men are at the same time units of accommodation. But they can all be characterized by certain types of spatial arrangement (....) And so the precipitate of a social unit in terms of space and indeed, more narrowly, in terms of rooms is a tangible and—in the literal sense—visible representation of its special nature” Elias, Norbert. 1983. The Court Society. Oxford: Basil Blackwell. P. 41-44.

ii Baillie, H. M.: Etiquette and the Planning of the State Apartments in Baroque Palaces, in: Archaeologia 101

Chatenet, M. La Cour de France au XVI siècle. Vie sociale et architecture. Paris, Picard, 2002. Chatenet, M., Ottenheym, K. A., De Jonge, K. (eds.). Public Buildings in Early Modern Europe. Turnhout, Brepols Publishers, 2010.

Sabatier, G. Le Palais d’Etat en Europe, de la Renaissance au Grand Siècle, in Auzépy, M.-F., Cornette, J. Palais et Pouvoir – de Constantinople à Versailles. Vincennes, PUV, 2003.

Share by Facebook Share by Twitter Share by LinkedIn Share by WhatsApp link to Copy to Clipboard
  • Structure
    • Office of the Minister of Foreign Affairs
    • General Secretariat for Foreign Affairs
    • Secretariat for Latin America and the Caribbean
    • Secretariat for Europe and North America
    • Secretariat for Africa and the Middle East
    • Secretariat for Asia and the Pacific
    • Secretariat for Economic and Financial Affairs
    • Secretariat for Multilateral Political Affairs
    • Secretariat for Trade Promotion, Science, Technology, Innovation and Culture
    • Secretariat for Brazilian Communities Abroad and Consular and Legal Affairs
    • Secretariat for Climate, Energy and Environment
    • Secretariat for Administrative Management
    • Rio Branco Institute
  • Subjects
    • Bilateral Relations
      • Americas
      • Middle East, Europe and Africa
      • Asia, the Pacific and Russia
      • All countries
    • Consular services
    • COP 30
    • Culture and Education
      • Educational themes
    • Economic and Commercial Foreign Policy
      • Agribusiness Promotion
      • Barriers to trade
      • International Financial, Tax and Investment Agenda
      • Foreign Negotiations Agenda
      • International Economic Organizations
      • International trade
    • Human Rights and Social Issues
      • Human Rights
    • International Cooperation
      • Brazilian Cooperation Agency
      • Brazilian Humanitarian Cooperation
      • Educational Cooperation
      • Sports Cooperation
      • Technical Cooperation
    • International Mechanisms
      • Inter-Regional Mechanisms
      • Regional Integration
    • International Peace and Security
      • Disarmament And Non-Proliferation
      • Maintenance And Consolidation Of Peace
      • Other Topics
    • Itamaraty Palace
      • Historical Archive
      • Public tours
    • Protocol
      • Diplomatic Corps List
      • International organisms
      • National Order Of The Southern Cross
      • Order of precedence of the Heads of Mission accredited to the Brazilian government
      • Order Of Rio Branco
      • Protocol
    • Science, Technology and Innovation
      • Innovation Diplomacy
      • Cooperation in Science, Technology and Innovation
      • Science, Technology and Innovation Sections (SECTECs)
      • Mapping of Innovation-Promoting Environments
    • Sustainable Development and the Environment
      • Sustainable Development
      • Environment and climate change
    • Treaties
  • Access to information
    • About Us
      • The Ministry
      • Minister of Foreign Affairs and other authorities
    • Frequently Asked Questions
      • Itamaraty and the Foreign Service Careers
      • Assistance to Brazilians abroad
      • International Treaties
      • Other themes
    • Administrative Management
      • Work At Itamaraty
      • Ethics committee at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs
  • Content centers
    • Speeches, Articles and Interviews
      • President of the Federative Republic of Brazil
      • Vice President of the Federative Republic of Brazil
      • Minister of Foreign Affairs
      • Secretary General of Foreign Affairs
      • Secretaries and other diplomats
      • Other high ranking officials
    • Statements and other documents
    • Social Media
      • Facebook
      • Flickr
      • Instagram
      • X - English
      • Youtube
  • Contact us
    • Contact Us
    • Press Area
      • Press Area
      • Official Portrait of the Minister of Foreign Affairs
      • Press Releases
      • Press accreditation
      • Press Office
      • Contacts
Reset Cookies
Acesso àInformação
All content on this site is published under license Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported.
Voltar ao topo da página
Fale Agora Refazer a busca