#Arch with
#Ionic #Entablature and
#Keystone Detail
The
#dentils arrangement we saw in
https://pixelfed.social/p/Splines/791013152244518907 goes well with the classic entablature
#profile we saw in
https://pixelfed.social/p/Splines/790888454384861893, and they both go well with
#simpleIntercolumniation, also known as
#architravato.
However, with arches, the entablature profile has to be adjusted a bit so that the dentils arrangement is as shown here. The shape, size, and gap between individual dentils remains the same, but a crucial difference is that the dentils at the
#outer corners touch each other.
As I mentioned in
https://pixelfed.social/p/Splines/803615973439041638, in
#arcadeIntercolumniation, the entablature is repeated on the wall behind the half-column. It doesn't end at the columns and has two "outside" corners and one "inside" corner. While the dentils at the outer corners touch each other, there is a single dentil in the inside corner that is shared by both walls.
A bedrock principle of dentils (like that with
#flutes and with eggs in the
#EggsAndDarts motif) is that when viewed directly from the front or the sides, a dentil must be centered on the column axis. It is this principle that forces us to adjust the profile of the entablature in arcade intercolumniation giving us the arrangement shown here.
The image also shows the detail of the decoration in front of the
#keystone. The most easily recognizable component of that is the large
#volute, which is the exact same size as the ones on the
#capital. The smaller volute is exactly half the size of the larger one. It is mirrored, rotated and put within a bounding rectangle whose height is exactly 2µ (288 units). The channels of both volutes are bridged with
#sinusoids derived from half turn of
#helix curves that have been flattened.
This motif in the keystone, where volutes of different sizes are combined with sinusoids is very common. It will be seen in the
#modillions of the
#modernEntablature.