Fr. 67.00

Architecture of Percier and Fontaine and the Struggle for - Sovereignty in Revolutionary Franc

English · Paperback / Softback

New edition in preparation, currently unavailable

Description

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This book explores how Percier and Fontaine's desire to build structures of permanence and their inadvertent reliance upon temporary architectural forms shaped a new awareness of time, memory, and modern political identity in France.


List of contents

Table of Contents
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Finding Revolutionary Architecture in the Decorative Arts


  1. Visionary Friendship at the End of the Ancien Régime
  2. Clean Sheets and Water Magic
    Architects in Training
    Roman Fever
    Solo Missions
    An Etruscan Friendship

  3. Propulsion and Residue: Constructing the Revolutionary Interior
  4. Rome à Rebours
    Staging Antiquity and Austerity
    Revolutionary Rearrangements
    Seek, Record, Destroy
    The Eternal Return of Luxury

  5. The Recueil de décorations intérieures: Furnishing a New Order
  6. Paper Studios
    Furnishing Techniques
    Strategies of Redaction
    Consuming Desires
    Writing Against Fashion
    Between the Lines
    Empire Styles

  7. The Platinum Cabinet: Luxury in Times of Uncertainty
  8. Pastoral Pastimes
    Incorruptible Precision
    Fast Times in Consulate Paris
    Haunting Season

  9. Tent and Throne: Architecture in a State of Emergency

    Après Coup

    Fantasies of the Ideal Villa

    A Permanent Work in Progress

    Little Pleasures

    The Moving Bivouac

    Political Theology

    Divorcing the Past
Coda: Revolutionary Atonement

About the author

Iris Moon is a visiting assistant professor in the School of Architecture at Pratt Institute, New York. She specializes in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century European art, architecture, and the decorative arts.

Summary

This book explores how Percier and Fontaine’s desire to build structures of permanence and their inadvertent reliance upon temporary architectural forms shaped a new awareness of time, memory, and modern political identity in France.

Additional text

"Professor Moon observes that the identity of the nobility that had been “fixed in seigneurial rights and inalienable ties to the land” and which disappeared in the Revolution, was replaced by “the mercurial personalities of Directory society”and wealth from capital and movable properties."--David P. Jordan, University of Illinois at Chicago, H-France Review

Product details

Authors Iris Moon
Publisher Taylor & Francis Ltd.
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 31.05.2019
 
EAN 9780367199081
ISBN 978-0-367-19908-1
No. of pages 186
Subject Humanities, art, music > Art > General, dictionaries

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