We are taught to believe in originals. In art and architecture in
particular, original objects vouch for authenticity, value, and truth,
and require our protection and preservation. The nineteenth century,
however, saw this issue differently. In a culture of reproduction,
plaster casts of building fragments and architectural features were
sold throughout Europe and America and proudly displayed in leading
museums. The first comprehensive history of these full-scale replicas,
Plaster Monuments examines how they were produced, marketed, sold, and
displayed, and how their significance can be understood today. Plaster
Monuments unsettles conventional thinking about copies and originals.
As Mari Lending shows, the casts were used to restore wholeness to
buildings that in reality lay in ruin, or to isolate specific features
of monuments to illustrate what was typical of a particular building,
style, or era. Arranged in galleries and published in exhibition
catalogues, these often enormous objects were staged to suggest the
sweep of history, synthesizing structures from vastly different
regions and time periods into coherent narratives. While architectural
plaster casts fell out of fashion after World War I, Lending brings
the story into the twentieth century, showing how Paul Rudolph
incorporated historical casts into the design for the Yale Art and
Architecture building, completed in 1963. Drawing from a broad archive
of models, exhibitions, catalogues, and writings from architects,
explorers, archaeologists, curators, novelists, and artists, Plaster
Monuments tells the fascinating story of a premodernist aesthetic and
presents a new way of thinking about history’s artifacts.
Les mer
Architecture and the Power of Reproduction
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780691239620
Publisert
2022
Utgiver
Princeton University Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter