Architecture, Vol. 6, Pages 14: Framing Atmospheres: The Display Window as a Dioramic Device for Atmospheric Experimentation in Historical and Contemporary Exhibit Design Culture


Architecture, Vol. 6, Pages 14: Framing Atmospheres: The Display Window as a Dioramic Device for Atmospheric Experimentation in Historical and Contemporary Exhibit Design Culture

Architecture doi: 10.3390/architecture6010014

Authors:
Marta Elisa Cecchi

When the breath of a passerby momentarily clouds the glass of a display window that distinctly withdraws from the urban continuum, it signals the presence of a perceptual threshold, an atmospheric interruption before resuming its path. This liminal space engages the observer not through physical entry, but through a multisensory activation. While the notion of atmosphere has been extensively theorised in architecture and environmental aesthetics, its implications remain insufficiently explored within retail design, particularly in the spatial and exhibit design perspective in the display window. Contemporary shop windows aim to engage passersby beyond mere product visibility; the need to articulate and design for atmosphere becomes more urgent. This article offers an atmospheric interpretation of the display window, understood not simply as a commercial interface or spatial facade but as a dioramic device in which all elements are staged in evocative micro-environments. Through the reinterpretation of selected historical and contemporary case studies, the research positions the display window as a privileged site for atmospheric experimentation. By framing window display design as an environmental and perceptual construct, the study contributes to the broader discourse on atmospheres, advancing the atmospheric paradigm as an operative approach for contemporary exhibit and spatial design practices.



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Marta Elisa Cecchi www.mdpi.com