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IG_226: Title Page Marie de Launay, L’architecture ottomane, 1873
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Titre

L’architecture ottomane

Type d'objet
Artiste
Launay, Marie de · Author
Şaşiyan, Bogos · Illustrator
Sébah, Pascal · Printing
Montani, Pietro · Illustrator, author
Datation
1873
Dimensions
39 x 51.8 cm

Iconographie

Description

This monumental book was published on the occasion of the 1873 Vienna world’s fair in three languages (German, French, and Ottoman) with the titles Die Ottomanische Baukunst / L’Architecture ottomane / Uṣūl-i Miʿmāriyye-i ʿUsmaniyye. It involved Marie de Launay (b. 1822) as the author of most of the texts, while the preface was written by another Ottoman bureaucrat named Mehmed Şevki Efendi. The architect of the Ottoman pavilions at the Vienna world’s fair, Pietro Montani (1829–1887), was the author of one chapter and the creator of numerous drawings. The artists Eugène Maillard and Bogos Şaşiyan (1841–1900) contributed further drawings, from which the photographer Pascal Sébah (1823–1886) derived the prints in the publication.

In several chapters, Marie de Launay mentions or describes stucco and glass windows at length. He describes (pp. 25–26) the technique of stucco and glass windows of the Yeşil Türbe (Green Tomb) in Bursa, which in his opinion is superior to the technique of European stained glass windows. He also provides the information that the restoration of the windows was initiated by Ahmed Vefik Effendi after the 1855 earthquake. In the chapter on the Selimiye Camii (Selimiye Mosque) in Edirne, Launay (p. 41) mentions the coloured-glass windows of the building. In the chapter on the Yeni Cami (New Mosque) in Eminönü, Istanbul, he lists features that generate the pleasant and mystic atmosphere of the mosque’s interior. One aspect he mentions is the matt light generated by the coloured-glass panes in the dome (p. 45). Launay compares the light falling through the plaster grid of the white glass windows in sultan Suleyman’s mausoleum to windows with similar frames but filled in with coloured glass. He describes the impression that they generate as a rain of diamonds (p. 52). In the chapter on the Şehzade Türbesi (Şehzade Tomb), Launay gives quite a detailed description of its stucco and glass windows in relation to the motifs, colours, and aesthetic impression within the architectural context (p. 56).

Launay, M. De, 1873. Die Ottomanische Baukunst / L’Architecture ottomane / Uṣūl-i Miʿmāriyye-i ʿUsmaniyye, Istanbul: Imprimerie et lithographie centrales.

Code Iconclass
25G41 · fleurs
41A6711 · fleurs dans un vase
48A98311 · feuillage ~ ornement
48A9833 · fleurs ~ ornement
Mot-clés Iconclass
bouquet · feuillage · fleur · vase

Technique / Etat

Technique

Book printing

Historique de l'oeuvre

Recherche

This book, compiled collaboratively in less than a year (Roberts/Williams, 2021, p. 4), is known to be the first comprehensive attempt to define Ottoman architecture in a scholarly manner. The publication’s declared aim was to show the architecture’s distinctive features, and the virtues and skills of the Ottomans. But it was intended not only as a celebration of national pride in Ottoman architectural history, but also a source for contemporary architects (Ersoy, 2015, p. 63).

Launay’s descriptions of stucco and glass windows show that they were considered an integral part of early and classical Ottoman architecture. Of great interest to Launay was the difference in their technique compared with Western stained-glass windows. He emphasizes the effect of the glass in the beveled perforated stucco (Launay, 1873, pp. 25–26). He describes their light as glimmering, like sparkling gemstones or a shower of diamonds (pp. 52, 56). In two cases he also mentions the typology and design of the windows. In the chapter on the Mausoleum of Sultan Suleiman the Lawgiver, he mentions the depiction of tiny flowers (p. 52). In the chapter on the Mausoleum of Şehzade, he goes into more detail, differentiating between the motif of ‘real flowers’ displayed as bouquets ‘in wide-bellied vases with long necks’, and ornamental or ‘stylized flowers’, as well as foliage (Launay, 1873, p. 56; McAuley, 2021, p. 87).

Datation
1873
Localisations liées
Lieu de production

Bibliographie et sources

Bibliographie

Launay, M. de (1873). Die Ottomanische Baukunst / L’Architecture ottomane / Uṣūl-i Miʿmāriyye-i ʿUsmaniyye. Imprimerie et lithographie centrales.

Ersoy, A. (2015). Architecture and the Late Ottoman Historical Imaginary. Reconfiguring the Architectural Past in a Modernizing Empire. Ashgate.

Roberts, M., & Williams, S. (2021). A Monumental Book. Ottoman Architecture at the 1873 Vienna World’s Fair. Art in Translation (Ottoman Architecture at the 1873 Vienna World’s Fair), *13*(1–3), 2–33.

McAuley, G. (2021), Translation. Ottoman Architecture. Art in Translation (Ottoman Architecture at the 1873 Vienna World’s Fair), *13*(1–3), 36–118.

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

Expositions

1873: Weltausstellung, Vienna.
18.5.2024–1.9.2024: Luminosité de l’Orient, Vitromusée Romont

Informations sur l'image

Nom de l'image
IG_Launay_1873_IG_226

Inventaire

Numéro de référence
IG_226
Auteur·e et date de la notice
Franziska Niemand 2024