Vol. 161 / No. 1396
Vol. 161 / No. 1396
In 1931 Charles Holden was appointed architect of the University
of London’s Bloomsbury estate. Its centrepiece, Senate House, was completed in
1937 but construction of the wider scheme was interrupted by war, with the
result that only parts were built. Holden’s last addition, completed in 1958,
was the Warburg Institute, but even that is unfinished. It was intended to be
one half of a building extending the length of Woburn Square, with the other
half occupied by the Courtauld Institute, but – partly because of resistance to
the demolition of the Georgian terrace on the site the Courtauld would have
occupied – the Warburg’s building remained an isolated block. Its reticent
forms are typical of the way Holden wove together Arts and Crafts and neo-Georgian
elements into his distinctive brand of modernism. In many ways the austere
result is characteristic of its architect, whose way of life was summed up by
C.R. Ashbee’s wife, Janet, in 1906: ‘bananas and brown bread on the table; no
hot water; plain living and high thinking and strenuous activity for the
betterment of the world’.1
The building exemplifies a twentieth-century British
interpretation of historical traditions that both complements and contrasts
with the Institute it contains, a German creation devoted to the study of
images as a way to understand the survival and transmission of culture across
time and space. Aby Warburg (1866–1929), who founded the library that lies at
the Institute’s heart, was an idiosyncratic proponent of nineteenth-century Kulturwissenschaft. No less high-minded
than Holden, he too sought ways to understand the relationship of tradition to
modernity.
Warburg’s family moved his library and photographic
collection from Hamburg to London in 1933 and the Institute was transferred to the
university in 1944. The relationship was amiable until 2008, when the
university decided to centralise its research libraries under a single administration
and impose a large service charge on their buildings. This proposal was a grave
threat to the Warburg’s independence.2 The dispute eventually led to the
Attorney General seeking clarification in the High Court of the terms of the
deed transferring the Institute’s collections to the university. The result was
a vindication for the Warburg: in 2014 it was ruled that the university had a
binding obligation to maintain the Institute in perpetuity as an independent
unit.
Resolution of the legal case has had happy consequences.
Most significantly, the university has allocated £9.5 million for repairs and improvements
to Holden’s long-neglected building. This will pay for the replacement of the
glass roof on its top storey, the former premises of the Courtauld Gallery,
which is used by the Slade School of Fine Art. The book stacks will be
refurbished with improved climate control and additional space for twenty years
of growth, and a purpose-built home created for the archive collections.
Admirably, the building will remain open throughout the two years of work,
which will start in September 2020. The architects are Haworth Tompkins, who
were responsible for the ingenious remodelling of the London Library, completed
in 2013.
In 2017 Bill Sherman was appointed Director of the Warburg. Previously
Director of Research and Collections at the Victoria and Albert Museum, London,
he brought to his new job the experience of the V. & A.’s Masterplan, which
demonstrated how changes to a building can be used to make changes to an
institution. He has initiated an ambitious ‘Warburg Renaissance Project’, which
will use the improvements to the building as the basis for a major development
of the Institute’s character and activities.
This will be achieved in part by expansion. The building’s
internal courtyard will house a new lecture theatre, increasing the audience
capacity for lectures from eighty to 140. Enlargement of the seminar rooms and improvement
of the spaces for group study will allow the Warburg to take more M.A. and
Ph.D. students and provide greater capacity for short courses and summer
schools. The double-height ground floor will be remodelled to provide a space
for exhibitions and a café – on central European lines, it is to be hoped, and
so with more than brown bread and bananas on offer.
These developments are based on a feeling that the Warburg
is not simply an incomplete building – it has an incomplete mission. With the transfer
of the library and collections to London, Warburg’s conception of the Institute
as a place for display as well as research was soon left behind. Despite the
fact that one of the M.A. courses taught there (with the National Gallery,
London) is Art History, Curatorship and Renaissance Culture, the Institute has
no space for the students to curate. Artists have often responded more
enthusiastically than art historians to Warburg’s understanding of images, yet
although the Slade occupies the Institute’s top floor, little has been done to
engage artists with its activities. The enlarged building, as well as providing
for exhibitions, will also be able to accommodate resident artists, musicians,
translators and creative writers.
An essential element of the new emphasis on display will be
giving permanent room in touch-screen form to the summation of Warburg’s work,
the Bilderatlas Mnemosyne, a long
sequence of photographic images of works of art that traces the migration of
visual symbols from Antiquity to the present. This will be reconstructed using
original materials for the first time since the 1920s in a joint exhibition
(opening April 2020) with the Haus der Kulturen der Welt, Berlin. It is
envisaged that the Bilderatlas project
will expand beyond the one thousand images chosen by Warburg to the
digitisation of the 400,000 images in the Institute’s photographic library. In
a separate project, over the next five years sixteen post-doctoral fellows will
work with Warburg’s materials on one of his central concepts, Bilderfahrzeuge, or ‘image-vehicles’,
examining the way that images move across time, place and cultures. This has
been funded by a grant of €6.3 million from the German Ministry for Education
and Research.
The Warburg Renaissance Project will cost £5 million on top
of the university’s £9.5 million grant. To date, £1 million has been pledged,
from the Hermann Reemtsma Foundation, Hamburg, and other donations are anticipated.
It will be interesting to see what proportion of the funds is raised within the
United Kingdom, where arguably the Institute is less well known than it is in
the rest of Europe. It is debatable whether that is a result of supposed
British parochialism or the way the Institute has in the past been focused on a
specialised community. If the Warburg Renaissance Project is the success that
it promises to be, the result will be an institution that will not only attract
new funding and new audiences but also offer a closer engagement with Aby
Warburg’s intellectual legacy.3
1 Quoted in C. Hutton, rev. A . Crawford: ‘Charles Henry
Holden (1875–1960)’, Oxford Dictionary of
National Biography, 2004, available at www.oxforddnb.com, accessed 16th
June 2019.
2 See ‘Editorial: The Warburg under threat’, THE BURLINGTON
MAGAZINE 150 (2008), p.723.
3 For more information on the project and details of how to
donate, see https://warburg.sas.ac.uk/support/warburgrenaissance, accessed 17th
June 2019.