Artistic Inversions of Isolation and Confinement: Public Art, Architecture, and the Liberation of Space on Roosevelt Island

IF 0.6 4区 艺术学 0 ARCHITECTURE
D. Vess
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Abstract:Blackwell's Island, now called Roosevelt Island, was originally an isolated location between Manhattan and Queens used to confine petty criminals, the mentally disabled, and those with serious illnesses. Many of these were ethnic minorities labeled as "undesirables." The island was a microcosm of the exclusion of ethnic and disabled groups and of ongoing debates as to who was an American. The architect James Renwick designed the Smallpox Hospital to embrace principles of humane care for others in the same style as St. Patrick's Cathedral, symbolically integrating Blackwell's with Manhattan. While islands with similar histories were abandoned, Roosevelt Island's proximity to Manhattan brought urban renewal and transformed the asylum into an apartment complex. Softly lit ruins extend the Manhattan nightscape, and public art celebrates freedoms denied earlier residents. Like the inversions of Louis Kahn, Roosevelt Island is itself an inversion, connected now to Manhattan and home to many foreign-born commuters from the United Nations. Cornell Tech, on the site of the old penitentiary, aptly named its final building the Bridge. Now "a little Manhattan," the island's public art bridges the gulf between exclusionary spaces of the past and the ongoing commentary on a more inclusive American identity.
隔离与限制的艺术反转:罗斯福岛上的公共艺术、建筑与空间解放
摘要:布莱克威尔岛,现在被称为罗斯福岛,最初是曼哈顿和皇后区之间的一个孤立的地方,用来关押轻罪罪犯、智障人士和患有严重疾病的人。其中许多是被贴上“不受欢迎”标签的少数民族。该岛是种族和残疾群体被排斥的缩影,也是关于谁是美国人的持续辩论的缩影。建筑师詹姆斯·伦威克(James Renwick)设计了天花医院,采用与圣帕特里克大教堂相同的风格,奉行人道关怀原则,象征性地将布莱克威尔医院与曼哈顿融为一体。虽然有着类似历史的岛屿被遗弃了,但罗斯福岛靠近曼哈顿,带来了城市更新,将收容所改造成了一座公寓大楼。灯光柔和的废墟扩展了曼哈顿的夜景,公共艺术庆祝早期居民被剥夺的自由。就像路易斯·卡恩(Louis Kahn)的倒挂一样,罗斯福岛本身就是一个倒挂,它现在与曼哈顿相连,是许多出生在外国的联合国通勤者的家园。康奈尔理工学院位于旧监狱的旧址上,将其最后一座建筑命名为“桥”。如今,岛上的公共艺术成了“小曼哈顿”,在过去的排他性空间和对更具包容性的美国身份的持续评论之间架起了一座桥梁。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: Change Over Time is a semiannual journal publishing original, peer-reviewed research papers and review articles on the history, theory, and praxis of conservation and the built environment. Each issue is dedicated to a particular theme as a method to promote critical discourse on contemporary conservation issues from multiple perspectives both within the field and across disciplines. Themes will be examined at all scales, from the global and regional to the microscopic and material. Past issues have addressed topics such as repair, adaptation, nostalgia, and interpretation and display.
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