ABSTRACT

Marble is one of the great veins through the architectural tradition and fundamental building block of the Mediterranean world, from the Parthenon of mid-fifth century Athens, which was constructed of pentelic marble, to Justinian’s Hagia Sophia in Constantinople and the Renaissance and Baroque basilica of St. Peter’s in the Vatican. Scholarship has done much in recent years to reveal the ways and means of marble. The use of colored marbles in Roman imperial architecture has recently been the subject of a major exhibition and the medieval traditions of marble working have been studied in the context of family genealogies and social networks. In addition, architectural historians have revealed the meanings evoked by marble revetted and paved surfaces, from Heavenly Jerusalem to frozen water. The present volume builds upon the body of recent and emerging research - from antiquity to the present day - to embrace a global focus and address the more unusual (or at least unexpected) uses, meanings, and aesthetic appeal of marble. It presents instances where the use of marble has revolutionized architectural practice, suggested new meaning for the built environment, or defined a new aesthetic - moments where this well-known material has been put to radical use.

chapter |11 pages

Introduction

Radical marble: architecture and innovation from antiquity to modernity

chapter 1|11 pages

Decoration as deliberate design

The strategic display of polychrome marbles at the Baths of Caracalla

chapter 3|29 pages

Controversial continuities

Giacinto Gimma and the art of marble intarsia *

chapter 4|20 pages

“In bright tints … nature’s own formation”

The uses and meaning of marble in Victorian building culture

chapter 5|14 pages

The silent seed of modernity

How marble made rationalism

chapter 6|26 pages

“In consequence of their whiteness”

Photographing marble sculpture from Talbot to today