November 10, 2011

MoMA Sculpture Garden Fire Escape

moma_fire_stairs.JPG

You'd think I'd learn the importance of clearing browser tabs by now. I've had this eBay listing open for a couple of weeks now, thinking I'd buy it. And then last night I decided to pull the trigger. And then to just do it in the morning. And it was gone.

It's a rather awesome press photo from September 1958 of a temporary staircase erected in the Museum of Modern Art's Sculpture Garden after the fire that destroyed a couple of Monet's Water Lilies paintings.

The Tribune Company was selling the print, liquidating the photo morgues of various of its venerable newspapers at $15 a pop, while stamping its watermark across the digital version "to deter image theft [sic]." Mhmm.

This kind of provisory structure, something more than a scaffold but less than an actual building, is awesome to me. It's a type of architecture that doesn't often get documented, much less studied, and almost never preserved. The related exception, though, are 19th century Army-issue observation towers at Gettysburg, but even those seem to have been designed, not just built.

Previously: MoMA on Fire

architecture | art | posted by greg at November 10, 2011 9:32 PM