Iron, ornament and architecture in Victorian Britain : myth and modernity, excess and enchantment / Paul Dobraszczyk.

By: Dobraszczyk, PaulMaterial type: TextTextLanguage: English Publisher: Burlington, VT : Ashgate Publishing Company, [2014]©2014 Description: xvi, 310 pages : illustrations (some color) ; 26 cmContent type: text | still image Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9781472418982 (hardcover : alk. paper)Subject(s): Ironwork -- Great Britain | Decoration and ornament -- Great Britain -- Victorian styleLOC classification: NK8243 .D63 2014
Contents:
Introduction: ornament unbound -- Marketing ornament: iron founders and visual cultures of display -- Social ornament: iron on the street -- Demotic ornament: seaside ironworlds -- Civic ornament: arcades and market halls -- Meta-ornament: iron and the railway station -- Postscript: ornament in ruins.
Summary: Vilified by leading architectural modernists and Victorian critics alike, mass-produced architectural ornament in iron has received little sustained study since the 1960s; yet it proliferated in Britain in the half century after the building of the Crystal Palace in 1851 - a time when some architects, engineers, manufacturers, and theorists believed that the fusion of iron and ornament would reconcile art and technology and create a new, modern architectural language. Comprehensively illustrated and richly researched, Iron, Ornament and Architecture in Victorian Britain presents the most sustained study to date of the development of mechanised architectural ornament in iron in nineteenth-century architecture, its reception and theorisation by architects, critics and engineers, and the contexts in which it flourished, including industrial buildings, retail and seaside architecture, railway stations, buildings for export and exhibition, and street furniture. Appealing to architects, conservationists, historians and students of nineteenth-century visual culture and the built environment, this book offers new ways of understanding the notion of modernity in Victorian architecture by questioning and re-evaluating both Victorian and modernist understandings of the ideological split between historicism and functionalism, and ornament and structure.
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Includes bibliographical references (pages 281-302) and index.

Introduction: ornament unbound -- Marketing ornament: iron founders and visual cultures of display -- Social ornament: iron on the street -- Demotic ornament: seaside ironworlds -- Civic ornament: arcades and market halls -- Meta-ornament: iron and the railway station -- Postscript: ornament in ruins.

Vilified by leading architectural modernists and Victorian critics alike, mass-produced architectural ornament in iron has received little sustained study since the 1960s; yet it proliferated in Britain in the half century after the building of the Crystal Palace in 1851 - a time when some architects, engineers, manufacturers, and theorists believed that the fusion of iron and ornament would reconcile art and technology and create a new, modern architectural language. Comprehensively illustrated and richly researched, Iron, Ornament and Architecture in Victorian Britain presents the most sustained study to date of the development of mechanised architectural ornament in iron in nineteenth-century architecture, its reception and theorisation by architects, critics and engineers, and the contexts in which it flourished, including industrial buildings, retail and seaside architecture, railway stations, buildings for export and exhibition, and street furniture. Appealing to architects, conservationists, historians and students of nineteenth-century visual culture and the built environment, this book offers new ways of understanding the notion of modernity in Victorian architecture by questioning and re-evaluating both Victorian and modernist understandings of the ideological split between historicism and functionalism, and ornament and structure.

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