.When John Soane, a famed architecture professor at the Royal Academy in London, taught scientific and artistic principles of construction in the early 19th century, he used architectural models created by the master designer François Fouquet.
Twenty of the rarest and most beautiful of these detailed plaster models of famous monuments from ancient Greece, Rome and the Near East are on view in “Wonders of the Ancient World: François Fouquet’s Model Masterpieces,” running through Sept. 24 at Sir John Soane’s Museum (13 Lincoln’s Inn Fields, 44-20-744-0426;). The collection provides an intriguing record of historically significant architecture, as well as insights into how the English incorporated ancient architectural principles into their buildings.
Each one is constructed over a metal armature, fixed to wooden bases and enclosed in glass domes. (Although it’s not part of the exhibit, Fouquet also made a model of the Virginia Capitol for Thomas Jefferson.)
The museum commissioned a limited edition of replicas of the Temple of Vesta at Tivoli from the British master craftsman Timothy Rogers, which can be purchased online at the museum shop or at the museum.
The museum is free, open Tuesday to Saturday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; the first Tuesday of every month until 9 p.m.
0 comments:
Post a Comment