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Antiquity on Display: Regimes of the Authentic in Berlin's Pergamon Museum [Kõva köide]

(Associate Professor and Chair, Department of Art, Architecture and Art History, University of San Diego)
  • Formaat: Hardback, 308 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 240x169x22 mm, kaal: 693 g, 99 in text illustrations and 8 colour plates
  • Sari: Classical Presences
  • Ilmumisaeg: 19-Jul-2012
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0199570558
  • ISBN-13: 9780199570553
  • Formaat: Hardback, 308 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 240x169x22 mm, kaal: 693 g, 99 in text illustrations and 8 colour plates
  • Sari: Classical Presences
  • Ilmumisaeg: 19-Jul-2012
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0199570558
  • ISBN-13: 9780199570553
Reconstructing the lost monuments of Antiquity became, after 1800, a complement to Europe's colonial imagination. Countless archaeologists and architects travelled to the East, excavated extinct cities, and shipped their finds to Europe for display in imperial museums.

Antiquity on Display is a critical biography of Berlin's Pergamon Museum and its popular architectural displays: the Great Altar of Pergamon, the Market Gate of Miletus, and the Ishtar Gate of Babylon. In this volume, Bilsel argues that the museum has produced a modern decor, an iconic image, which has replaced the lost antique originals, rather than creating an explicitly hypothetical representation of Antiquity. Addressing the dilemmas raised by the continuing presence of these displays, which embody the distinctive traits of the artistic and ideological programs of the last two centuries, Bilsel questions what the process of reproduction and authentication of Antiquity in the museum tells us about our changing perceptions of historic monuments. Documenting the process through which these imaginative reproductions of architecture were conceived, staged, and came to be perceived as authentic monuments, this volume offers an insight into the history of Berlin's Museum Island and the shifting regimes of the authentic in museum displays from the nineteenth century to the present.

Arvustused

Antiquity on Display is another fine addition to OUP's Classical Presences series and is highly recommended not just for scholars interested in the reception of antiquity in 18th- and 19th-century Germany, but, thanks to its accessible style, also for anyone planning to visit Berlin. * Lydia Tjapkes-Langerwerf, Classical Journal * a formidable book * Mike Crang, Antiquity * Antiquity on Display is an important book, both for the history of German museums and the larger field of Museum Studies. Bilsel's perceptive analyses of various issues ... raise critical questions about exhibition practices, historic preservation, and authenticity that remain relevant to museums today. * Carole Paul, Journal of Art Historiography * a useful and timely case study of how the excavation and publication of ancient remains is only the beginning of a new phase of their lives. * Andrea Guzzetti, Bryn Mawr Classical Review *

List of Figures
xi
List of Plates
xviii
Introduction 1(28)
Space and relief in the Pergamon Room
1(7)
The original and its double
8(7)
On the museum's context: Historical monuments or a decor?
15(6)
A critical biography of the spaces in the museum
21(2)
Hegemonies and the longue duree
23(6)
1 No Place like Greece: Berlin's Museum Island and the Architectures of History
29(60)
Karl Friedrich Schinkel's A View of Greece in its Prime
29(10)
Greece: From a trope to a territoire
39(11)
The destination of antiquities: What the museum lacks
50(6)
`All men will be brothers'? Bildung and the vocation of the museum
56(5)
The world seen through an Ionic window: The Altes Museum
61(15)
The Neues Museum: A tower or a tree?
76(13)
2 Reconstructing Pergamon: Antique Fragments, Modern Visions
89(36)
Marbles lost and found: Carl Humann in Bergama
89(11)
The problem of the frieze: Tectonic or painterly?
100(8)
The Pergamon Panorama: Urban visions for Prussia and France
108(9)
Temple inside a temple: The first Pergamon Museum by Fritz Wolff
117(8)
3 A Museum for the Empire: The Problem of Style
125(34)
Sculpting the void: Alfred Messel's project for the Museum Island
125(14)
The fin-de-siecle critique: Redeemer-art
139(8)
Art versus ethnology: Taxonomies of an empire
147(5)
Wilhelm Bode's style rooms: The original setting and the bourgeois interieur
152(7)
4 Reconstructing Babylon: The Return of the Archaic
159(30)
Transgressing Bilderverbot: Back to Babylon
159(6)
Prussia's Assyria: In search of an organic essence
165(12)
The lion of Babylon in the age of the work of art
177(6)
Symbol, ornament, art: Figures of the counter-enlightenment
183(6)
5 Architecture in the Museum: Monuments for a Mass Spectacle
189(26)
The altar and its frames
189(8)
Berlin's museum war
197(10)
A total vision: Theodor Wiegand's `living people's museum'
207(4)
Reproductions without originals?
211(4)
Epilogue: Regimes of the Authentic
215(22)
The master of the copies
215(7)
The rank and file: Bureaucracies of the authentic
222(8)
Tableaux vivants: Performing the aura
230(7)
Select Bibliography 237(32)
Index 269
Can Bilsel is Associate Professor and Chair of the Department of Art, Architecture and Art History at the University of San Diego. He is also the founding director of the University of San Diego's Architecture Program.