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Book cover of Charles Garnier's Paris opera
Europe - 19th Century Architecture, Paris - History, Individual Architects, Designers, & Planners, General & Miscellaneous French History, French Opera, Europe - French Architecture, Palladianism & Neo-Classicism Architecture

Charles Garnier's Paris opera

by Christopher C. Mead
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Overview

Charles Garnier's Paris Opera (1861-1875) is one of the largest, most flamboyant, and most expensive monuments commissioned by the Second Empire of Napoleon III. For years scholars have recognized that the Opera is key to any understanding of nineteenth-century French architecture, yet questions of style that have surrounded the Opera since its inception have remained unresolved. By making systematic use of the mostly unpublished Opera Archive, Mead fills in the missing links to previous investigations and unlocks the significance of this seminal masterpiece.

Mead approaches the Opera through Garnier's life. In a careful analysis of the Second Empire's intellectual climate, he provides a new interpretation of the genesis of the Opera's style. Mead reconstructs in detail the social, political, intellectual, professional, and industrial circumstances of Garnier's career as they were expressed through the Opera's design and construction. He shows that with the Paris Opera, Charles Garnier revived French classicism by insisting on its necessary evolution to a modern expression of its time, and on its empathetic origins in the rich complexities of human experience.

About the Author, Christopher C. Mead

Christopher Mead is Dean of the College of Fine Arts and Professor in the Department of Art and Art History at the University of New Mexico.

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Book Details

Published
January 16, 1992
Publisher
New York, N.Y : Architectural History Foundation ; c1991
Pages
352
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780262132756

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