The Atlas and the Skyscraper: On Aby Warburg and Louis Sullivan
2022; Postgraduate Program in Tourism of the Federal University of Rio Grande do Norte; Volume: 9; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês
10.36025/arj.v9i1.29657
ISSN2357-9978
Autores Tópico(s)Historical Geography and Cartography
ResumoJ. L. Borges compared Orson Welles’s masterpiece Citizen Kane to a labyrinth without center, a building expanding horizontally with no limits in space, or synchronically with no limits in time. It may be tempting to compare Warburg’s atlas Mnemosyne to a building expanding with no limits vertically, or diachronically; but such a building has also a proper name, that of the Tower of Babel, or, if we were to translate it into a now common noun, a skyscraper. This type of building has its own Daedalus, the great North-American architect Louis Sullivan (1856 – 1924). My paper tells the story of the possible encounter between Warburg and the man who had arguably already invented the skyscraper by the time of Warburg’s American journey, and had already built enough to allow a prescient man such as Warburg to imagine what was to come — with the sky, literally, as the limit.
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