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a catalyst for the cultivation of scientific activity
within the university as a whole’.22
Smith’s choice of subjects for the library
needs to be interpreted in relation to these con-
cerns. In one sense, the prominence given to the
images of Newton and Bacon may be seen as an
attempt to make the most of the college’s illustri-
ous scientific past at a period when new research
in the experimental sciences, like undergraduate
numbers, were at a low ebb, just as the inclusion
of Ray and Willoughby might be associated with
the not wholly successful attempts made by Ri-
chard Walker (who might indeed have suggested
the commissioning of the busts) to re-establish
botanical studies through his foundation of the
University’s Botanical Garden. But Smith’s addi-
tions to the imagery of library and the chapel are
better understood as the visual equivalent to his
popularising of experimental science through the
publication of accessible textbooks. The place of
science within the Cambridge curriculum was
being consolidated not only through the publi-
cation of these works but also through the pres-
ence of scientists’ images in the library where
they were read.
Quite apart from this particular grouping of
images, the commissioning and use of the busts
is interesting in that most of the sitters repre-
sented in this form already had a presence in
the college as painted portraits. What then, we
may ask, was to be gained by commissioning im-
ages of the same figures as more expensive mar-
ble busts? These commissions must presumably
have been undertaken on the assumption that a
representation in sculptural form added some-
thing or worked in a different way. Of course,
given that at least some of these busts were from
the start intended for display in the library, such
images might be seen in terms of their tradition-
al role as appropriate ornaments for a library, as
recommended by Naudé. Without doubt, Smith and Walker would have been well aware of earli-
er examples of libraries adorned with busts of an-
cient and modern authors, not to mention cases
where family members contributed busts of fig-
ures from an institution’s past history, as at the
Bibliothèque Sainte-Geneviève.
However, since the busts produced as part of
Smith’s ambitious plans were intended for dis-
play not just in the library but throughout the
college, the significance of commissioning sculp-
tural images should perhaps be understood not
simply in terms of a tradition of library busts.
Instead, the busts at Trinity seem to have been
commissioned and executed on the assumption
that the sculptural portrait was not simply an al-
ternative or supplement to a painted image but
carried with it a different cluster of associations,
and a perhaps heavier weight of meaning. Such
images, after all, were intended to celebrate the
Fig. 14: Louis-François Roubiliac, Sir Isaac Newton, 1755,
marble, Trinity College, Cambridge.
malcolm
baker210
22 J. Gascoigne, Cambridge in the Age of Enlightenment: Science, Religion and Politics from the Restoration to the
French Revolution, Cambridge 1988, p. 78.
Open Access © 2018 by BÖHLAU VERLAG GMBH & CO.KG, WIEN KÖLN WEIMAR
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Buch Der Arkadenhof der Universität Wien und die Tradition der Gelehrtenmemoria in Europa"
Der Arkadenhof der Universität Wien und die Tradition der Gelehrtenmemoria in Europa
- Titel
- Der Arkadenhof der Universität Wien und die Tradition der Gelehrtenmemoria in Europa
- Herausgeber
- Ingeborg Schemper-Sparholz
- Martin Engel
- Andrea Mayr
- Julia Rüdiger
- Verlag
- Böhlau Verlag
- Ort
- WIEN · KÖLN · WEIMAR
- Datum
- 2018
- Sprache
- deutsch
- Lizenz
- CC BY 4.0
- ISBN
- 978-3-205-20147-2
- Abmessungen
- 18.5 x 26.0 cm
- Seiten
- 428
- Schlagwörter
- Scholars‘ monument, portrait sculpture, pantheon, hall of honour, university, Denkmal, Ehrenhalle, Memoria, Gelehrtenmemoria, Pantheon, Epitaph, Gelehrtenporträt, Büste, Historismus, Universität
- Kategorien
- Geschichte Chroniken