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Student essay.


A new bookshop set within an American museum of art was inspired by monochromatic
1. existing in or having only one color.
2. pertaining to or affected by monochromatic vision.
3. staining with only one dye at a time.


mon·o·chro·mat·ic (m
 art and subtly respects the architecture of its Beaux Arts host.

The new bookshop inside the University of Michigan Museum of Art was designed by students of the University's school of architecture. Positioned on the main axis of the Beaux Arts building, it is an independent structure measuring 540 sq ft (about 50 sq m).

The designers describe the bookshop as a 'reluctant object' for its position within the host building obliges it to fit in, to avoid calling attention to itself. Inspired by Robert Ryman, the American artist of white paintings, who achieves subtle effects with monochromatic textures, the exterior skin of the shop is an essay in textured monochrome. White pickled plywood panels clad the two long walls and a white painted drywall surface presents a textured face to the existing apse APSE - Ada Programming Support Environment. On the fourth wall, a cloudy white screen of fibreglass acrylic is a backdrop for an information desk.

Externally, the white surfaces provide a background for medieval fragments and figures, their display designed to disturb the symmetry of the box and convey ambivalence. Embedded into one long wavering wall is a slender glass case which, supported on 101 spidery steel legs, holds manuscripts, chalices chalice [Lat.,=cup], ancient name for a drinking cup, retained for the eucharistic or communion cup. Its use commemorates the cup used by Jesus at the Last Supper. Celebrated examples are the Great Chalice of Antioch (Syriac), of embossed silver, excavated there in 1910 and attributed to the 1st cent., and an elaborately ornamented chalice found in 1868 at Ardagh, Ireland, and believed to be Celtic work of the 9th or 10th cent. See Grail, Holy. and small artefacts. On the opposite exterior is a composition of medieval figurines, individually held off the wall by steel arms and bases. As an object in space the box, that is the bookshop, becomes almost symmetrical, almost white, almost an object that competes with art.
COPYRIGHT 2001 EMAP Architecture
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2001, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Publication:The Architectural Review
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jan 1, 2001
Words:258
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