Literary Architecture

July 2024
Architect, illustrator and author, in 2010 Matteo Pericoli started his Literary Architecture Workshop, which invites participants to transform short stories and novels into architecture. It is not a matter of imagining or giving shape to the locations and environments that the writing narrates, but rather of understanding the very structure of the story and translating it into a building. A meta-literary exercise in which the author’s narrative construction acquires, in the hands of the reader, concreteness in the form of drawings or models. The book itself, which contains twelve examples referring to as many novels, such as Heart of Darkness (Conrad), The Adversary (Carrère) or The Years of Annie Enraux, developed by Pericoli himself, is presented as an architectural structure, specifically a museum in the Greek sense of the term as a place sacred to the Muses, ideal for inspiration and contemplation. The buildings that arise from the Laboratory are by necessity subjective. For example, in front of Amy Hempel’s short story The Harvest, which twice recounts a car accident in which the writer herself is a victim – though the second story begins with the unsettling words “I omit many things when I tell the truth” – two groups participating in the workshop imagine different buildings, though both as deceptive-looking as the story, with unexpected spaces, columns that do not hold anything up and furniture elements – made of concrete – that are instead the real structures of the building. Surprising in many ways, Il grande museo vivente dell’immaginazione makes you want to try it yourself, with a beloved short story, drawing paper, colored pencils, cardboard, glue and scissors.

Il grande museo vivente dell’immaginazione
Matteo Pericoli
Il Saggiatore, Milan, 2022 166 pages, 25 euros
ISBN 978-88-428-3218-8