Startseite What Archival Records Do or Do Not Say: The Destruction of Plaster Casts in Geneva
Kapitel
Lizenziert
Nicht lizenziert Erfordert eine Authentifizierung

What Archival Records Do or Do Not Say: The Destruction of Plaster Casts in Geneva

  • Clara Bolle-Fivaz
Veröffentlichen auch Sie bei De Gruyter Brill

Abstract

Geneva hides one of the most important plaster cast collections of Frenchspeaking Europe, divided into two groups that together encompassed, at their high point, more than 3,500 casts and many of the corresponding molds. One group comprises a study collection that was established in the second half of the 18th century by the Arts Society of Geneva, and the other was a workshop, founded in the late 19th century for the School of Industrial Arts. Both collections have experienced tumultuous fates as a result of societal and political changes, and many plaster casts were discarded in the process. An analysis of the ways in which their destruction was documented or omitted by the archival records provides insight into various aspects of curatorial practices of plaster cast collections from the 18th century to the present day. Archival records highlight how poor storage conditions and frequent moves affected the state and preservation of the collections, and how questions of value were often a decisive factor in the restoration or abandonment of damaged pieces. The same questions of value also determined how archival records documented the history of the collections by emphasizing the importance of few emblematic pieces while ignoring many others.

Abstract

Geneva hides one of the most important plaster cast collections of Frenchspeaking Europe, divided into two groups that together encompassed, at their high point, more than 3,500 casts and many of the corresponding molds. One group comprises a study collection that was established in the second half of the 18th century by the Arts Society of Geneva, and the other was a workshop, founded in the late 19th century for the School of Industrial Arts. Both collections have experienced tumultuous fates as a result of societal and political changes, and many plaster casts were discarded in the process. An analysis of the ways in which their destruction was documented or omitted by the archival records provides insight into various aspects of curatorial practices of plaster cast collections from the 18th century to the present day. Archival records highlight how poor storage conditions and frequent moves affected the state and preservation of the collections, and how questions of value were often a decisive factor in the restoration or abandonment of damaged pieces. The same questions of value also determined how archival records documented the history of the collections by emphasizing the importance of few emblematic pieces while ignoring many others.

Kapitel in diesem Buch

  1. Frontmatter I
  2. Preface V
  3. Contents VII
  4. Acknowledgements XI
  5. Introduction 1
  6. I (Post)colonial Contexts
  7. Introduction 19
  8. The (Mis)Performance of Cast Collections 25
  9. The Rise and Fall of the Museo de Copias: On the History of the Collection of Sculpture Replicas in the National Museum of Fine Arts in Santiago de Chile 51
  10. Embrace the Copy: Plaster Casts and Modernity in Art Education in Japan 77
  11. II Contested Classification: Art vs. Archaeology vs. Anthropology
  12. Introduction 103
  13. Hidden in Plain View: The Plaster Cast Collection at the National Museum of Natural History of the Smithsonian Institution 109
  14. Falling Between the Cracks: UC Berkeley’s Plaster Casts 131
  15. “Museum of Ancient Art” or White Elephant? The Battle Collection of Plaster Casts at the University of Texas at Austin 151
  16. Through Athena’s Eyes: The Henry W. Sage Collection of Casts at Cornell University 175
  17. From Pillar to Post: Classical Casts at the British Museum 201
  18. III The Contingencies of Value
  19. Introduction 221
  20. Burnt, Destroyed, Sold, Lost: The Fate of Cast Collections in the 18th and 19th Centuries 225
  21. What Archival Records Do or Do Not Say: The Destruction of Plaster Casts in Geneva 239
  22. Die Abguss-Sammlungen im Museum Fridericianum und in der Gemäldegalerie Kassel 261
  23. Von systematischer Vernachlässigung bis absichtlicher Zerstörung: Gipsabgüsse in Jenaer und Wiener Antikensammlungen im 20. Jahrhundert 285
  24. IV The Contingencies of Authenticity
  25. Introduction 309
  26. Keep the Copy! Die Gipsabguss-Sammlung der Kunsthalle im sog. Hamburger Faksimile-Streit 313
  27. Verkauft, verschenkt, zerstört. Vergessen? Die Frankfurter Abguss-Sammlung(en): Versuch einer Rekonstruktion 329
  28. The Fate of the Berlin Plaster Cast Collections: From Veneration to Destruction, Defacement, and Disposal 349
  29. Smashing Casts: Replication of Scottish Early Medieval Sculpture as a Case Study on the Fragility of Value 375
  30. V Revolution and Iconoclasm
  31. Introduction 401
  32. Destruction of Plaster Casts in Workshops and Collections of Important French Institutions in the 19th and 20th Centuries 407
  33. The Fate of Cast Collections in French Education: Between Destruction and Abandonment 435
  34. “A Rampage by Vandals”: The History and Destruction of the Plaster Casts of the National College of Art and Design of Ireland 455
  35. Models for Eternity: The Changing Role of Plaster Casts at The Maryland Institute 469
  36. VI Envois
  37. ‘Classical’ Plaster Casts in Enlightenment and Colonialist Discourses on Race 491
  38. Destroy the Copy? Destroy the Copy! A History of (Non-)appreciation 527
  39. About the Authors 585
  40. Indices
  41. Locations and Collections 589
  42. Individuals 595
  43. General 601
Heruntergeladen am 6.11.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783110757965-014/html
Button zum nach oben scrollen