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IG_253: Title Page Alfred Normand, L'architecture des nations étrangères, 1870
(IG_Normand_1870_IG_253)

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Title

L'architecture des nations étrangères

Type of Object
Artist / Producer
Dating
1870

Iconography

Description

Alfred Normand’s publication L'architecture des nations étrangères. Études sur les principales constructions du parc à l’Exposition Universelle de Paris (1867) was published in 1870 in Paris by A. Morel, éditeur-libraire. The core of the publication are fifty-eight full-page illustrations executed as engravings or as chromolithographs. They show ground plans, elevations and specific architectural elements of selected foreign pavilions at the 1867 world’s fair in Paris. The image section is preceded by a related text of twenty-seven pages. While the publication also offers some illustrations of the pavilions of Austria, Great Britain, Prussia, the Netherlands, and Spain, the focus is on Egypt, Tunis, Morocco, and Russia.

A great part of the description of the architecture of the Tunisian pavilion, the so-called Palais du Bey, is dedicated to its stucco and glass windows. In addition, four full-page colour illustrations show stucco and glass windows as individual elements, detached from their architectural context (IG_270, IG_271, IG_272, IG_273).

Iconclass Code
48A981 · ornament ~ geometric motifs
Iconclass Keywords

Technique / State

Technique

Book printing

History

Research

With its large format, the elaborate production, and its extensive range of illustrations, L'architecture des nations étrangères can be considered an architectural superbook. When this genre of book became popular in the 19th century with the rise of chromolithography, it was also used to record non-European architecture that was not familiar to Western audiences (Graves, 2021, p. 21). Unlike most of these books (for example IG_30, IG_88 or IG_221), L'architecture des nations étrangères records representations of foreign architecture made for world’s fairs, rather than local architectural heritage on site.
In 1867, a world’s fair included life-size buildings, such as houses, palaces, or mosques, for the first time. Alfred Normand appreciated this innovation, which gave an insight into the variety of different types of construction (Normand, 1870, p. 1). The aim of the publication was to serve as a record beyond the period of the world’s fair itself. Intended mostly for his colleagues in the arts, Normand wanted to document the most interesting details, both from an artistic point of view and in terms of the construction methods (p. 2).

The text on the Tunisian pavilion gives very specific information on one architectural element: the stucco and glass windows. The starting point for the design of all the windows is given as a geometric shape that repeats at intervals of varying length creating a kind of mosaic. By extending and overlapping the shape, a great variety of combinations is possible (p. 13).
Normand describes the construction process of the windows as follows. First, plaster is poured into a wooden frame 5–6 centimeters thick, and the two faces of the resulting plate are straightened. The geometric design is then drawn on the surface, and the plaster is perforated in accordance with this. The exposed parts are not carved out perpendicular to the surface, but at an angle, so that after small pieces of coloured glass have been sealed behind the plate, the light they cast is visible, even when the windows are installed high up (p. 13). Normand describes the light and shadow effects produced by these windows as pleasing to the eye. According to him, on most buildings' exteriors the rear side of the windows with the glass is visible, though in the Palais du Bey inner windows were doubled with outer stucco windows with similar geometric perforations, yet not sealed with pieces of glass (p. 13–14). The need for windows that filter the light is explained as a consequence of the hot climate in Africa (p. 13).

Dating
1870
Related Locations
Place of Manufacture

Bibliography and Sources

Literature

Normand, A. (1870). L'architecture des nations étrangères. Études sur les principales constructions du parc à l’Exposition Universelle de Paris (1867), A. Morel, éditeur-libraire.

Graves, M. S. (2021). Spatchcocking the Arabesque. Big Books, Industrial Design, and the Captivation of Islamic Art and Architecture (pp. 19–55). In Leonard. A. (ed.). Arabesque without End. Across Music and the Arts, from Faust to Shahrazad, Routledge.

Exhibitions

1867: Exposition Universelle, Paris

Image Information

Name of Image
IG_Normand_1870_IG_253
Credits
Source gallica.bnf.fr / BnF

Inventory

Reference Number
IG_253
Author and Date of Entry
Franziska Niemand 2024