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The Gray Cloth: Paul Scheerbart'S Novel On Glass Architecture at Meripustak

The Gray Cloth: Paul Scheerbart'S Novel On Glass Architecture by 39 Plt and Stuart, MISC

Books from same Author: 39 Plt and Stuart

Books from same Publisher: MISC

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  • General Information  
    Author(s)39 Plt and Stuart
    PublisherMISC
    ISBN9780262194600
    Pages136
    BindingHardbound
    LanguageEnglish
    Publish YearNovember 2001

    Description

    MISC The Gray Cloth: Paul Scheerbart'S Novel On Glass Architecture by 39 Plt and Stuart

    The German expressionist, architectural visionary, author, inventor, and artist Paul Scheerbart (1863-1915) wrote several fictional utopian narratives related to glass architecture. In The Gray Cloth, the first of his novels to be translated into English, Scheerbart uses subtle irony and the structural simplicity of a fairy tale to present the theories of colored glass outlined in his well-known treatise Glass Architecture. The novel is set forward in time to the mid-twentieth century. The protagonist, a Swiss architect named Edgar Krug, circumnavigates the globe by airship with his wife, constructing wildly varied, colored-glass buildings. His projects include a high-rise and exhibition/concert hall in Chicago, a retirement complex for air pilots on the Fiji Islands, the structure for an elevated train across a zoological park in northern India, and a suspended residential villa on the Kuria Muria Islands off the coast of Oman in the Arabian Sea. Fearing that his architecture is challenged by the colorfulness of women's clothing, Krug insists that his wife wear all gray clothing with the addition of ten percent white. This odd demand brings him notoriety and sensationalizes his international building campaign. For the reader, it underlines the confluence of architecture with fashion, gender, and global media. In his introduction, John Stuart surveys Scheerb.



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