Wednesday, June 25, 2008
Competency # 5-Tagging
3-5(1) amazon(2) architecture(30) art(19) beautiful book(1) bibliophilia(4) Boeken(1) books(14) books about books(13) books and authors(1) books and reading(3) coffee table(5) France(1) hardcover(2) history(4) home(2) images(1) interior design(4) international(2) Italy(1) James H. Billington (foreward)(1) libraries(54) library(11) Library architecture(2) library buildings(3) lifestyle(1) Manchester(1) new york city(1) non-fiction(17) Nonfiction Libraries(1) own(2) Photography(20) photos(8) pictorial works(3) picture(2) read(2) reference(4) Switzerland(1) tbr(3) Test Living with books(1) ursus(1) wishlist(5) World(4)
Tags from librarything.com with the search terms "Library Architecture."
I chose the title: "The Most Beautiful Libraries in the World" by Guillaume de Laubier. I chose it because I would love to see this book, I imagine it must be luscious with images and descriptions of these incredible buildings.
A review from Amazon.com says: Speaking as a professional librarian for more than three decades -- someone who upon visiting a city for the first time usually seeks out the main library for a look around -- there are libraries and then there are libraries. Even those in major U.S. cities tend to be utilitarian first (sometimes utilitarian only). Those dating from the 1950s and `60s are generally pretty ugly, as well. For richness and beauty, you have to go overseas to find libraries constructed in an earlier time, when architecture and ornamentation was an end in itself. Except for the small collections kept by monasteries, the library is pretty much an invention of the Renaissance and the Age of Reason. The National Library of Austria, in Vienna, is gorgeously Baroque, with allegorical paintings on the ceilings and narrow staircases concealed behind hidden doors in the stacks. The ever-suspicious Vatican Library still locks its bookcases, filled with bibliographical relics of incalculable value. The Senate Library in Paris is a blend of Neoclassical and Italianate, but it's very much a working library and the old card catalogue has been replaced by computers. I was privileged many years ago to visit the breathtaking library at the Abbey of Saint Gall, home of probably the world's most important collection of surviving incunabula. The curving bookshelves of inlaid wood, the hundreds of carved portraits, arms, and both religious and secular symbols are just incredible. And there's the Bodleian Library at Oxford, the first-ever university collection. And there are more than a dozen others in this beautifully produced volume, of which only three in the United States were deemed worthy of inclusion: the Library of Congress, the New York Public, and the Boston Athenaeum. All of which are practically new buildings compared to the others, but the same principal is at work -- to house knowledge in artistically serene surroundings. Remember the overhead shot of the LC's main Reading Room in *All the President's Men*? That says it all. (Michael K. Smith, 2004)
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1 comment:
Good job with the tagging but you have not spelled competency correctly!
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