- Moorish Revival
Moorish Revival or Neo-Moorish is one of the exotic revival
architectural style s that were adopted by architects of Europe and the Americas in the wake of theRomanticist fascination with all things oriental. It reached the height of its popularity after the mid-nineteenth century, part of a widening vocabulary of articulated decorative ornament beyond classical and Gothic modes. Little distinction was made in European and American practice between motifs drawn fromOttoman Turkey or fromAndalusia .The "Moorish" garden structures built at Sheringham, Norfolk, ca. 1812, were an unusual touch at the time, a parallel to
chinoiserie , but as early as 1826,Edward Blore used islamic arches, domes of various size and shapes and other details of Near Eastern Islamic architecture to great effect in his design forAlupka Palace inCrimea , a cultural setting that had already been penetrated by authentic Ottoman styles. By the mid-19th century, the style was adopted by theJews ofCentral Europe , who associatedmudejar architectural forms with the golden age ofJewry in medieval MuslimSpain . As a consequence, Moorish Revival spread around the globe as a preferred style ofsynagogue architecture .In the
United States ,Washington Irving 's travel sketch, "Tales of the Alhambra " (1832) first brought Moorish Andalusia into readers' imaginations; one of the first neo-Moorish structures wasIranistan , a mansion ofP. T. Barnum inBridgeport, Connecticut . Constructed in 1848 and demolished by fire ten years later, this architectural extravaganza "sprouted bulbous domes and horseshoe arches". [John C. Poppeliers, S. Allen Chambers Jr. "What Style Is It: A Guide to American Architecture". ISBN 0-471-25036-8. Page 63".] In the 1860s, the style spread across America, withOlana , the painterFrederic Edwin Church 's house overlooking the Hudson River, Castle Garden inJacksonville andNutt's Folly inNatchez, Mississippi usually cited among the more prominent examples. After the American Civil War, Moorish or Turkish smoking rooms achieved some popularity. There were Moorish details in the interiors created for the Havemeyer residence on Fifth Avenue byLouis Comfort Tiffany . The 1914Pittock Mansion inPortland, Oregon incorporates Turkish design features, as well as French, English, and Italian ones; the smoking room in particular has notable Moorish revival elements. In 1937, theCorn Palace inMitchell, South Dakota added unusual minarets and Moorish domes, unusual because the polychrome decorations are made out of corn cobs of various colors assembled like mosaic tiles to create patterns. The 1891Tampa Bay Hotel , whose minarets and Moorish domes are now the pride of theUniversity of Tampa , was a particularly extravagant example of the style. Other schools with Moorish Revival buildings includeYeshiva University in New York City.Although
Carlo Bugatti employed Moorish arcading among the exotic features of his furniture, shown at the 1902 exhibition atTurin , by that time the Moorish Revival was very much on the wane everywhere butImperial Russia , where the shell-encrusted inMoscow (a stylisation of a Portuguese palace inSintra ) and the Neo-Mameluk palaces ofKoreiz exemplify the continuing development of the style, and in Bosnia, where the Austrian government commissioned a range of Neo-Moorish structures. This included application of ornamentations and other Moorish design strategies neither of which had much to do with prior architectural direction of indigenousBosnian architecture . Post office inSarajevo for example follows distinct formal characteristics of design like clarity of form, symmetry, and proportion while the interior followed the same doctrine.Library in Sarajevo is an example of Pseudo Moorish architectural language using decorations and pointed arches while still integrating other formal elements into the design.In
Spain , the country conceived as the place of origin of Moorish ornamentation, the interest in this sort of architecture fluctuated from province to province. The main stream was calledNeo-Mudéjar . InCatalonia ,Antoni Gaudí 's profound interest inMudéjar heritage governed the design of his early works, such asCasa Vicens or office.Moorish Revival Theaters in America
Theatres outside the United States
Moorish revival synagogues
Europe
Munich synagogue, by
Friedrich von Gärtner , 1832 was the earliest Moorish revival synagogue (destroyed onKristallnacht )Semper Synagogue , byGottfried Semper , Dresden, 1839–40 (destroyed onKristallnacht )Leopoldstädter Tempel , Vienna, Austria, 1853-58 (destroyed onKristallnacht )Dohány Street Synagogue , Budapest (Hungary), 1854-1859Leipzig synagogue 1855 (destroyed onKristallnacht )Glockengasse synagogue , Cologne, Germany, 1855-61 (destroyed onKristallnacht )Tempel Synagogue , Cracow, Poland, 1860-62Spanish Synagogue ,Prague , 1868Rumbach Street synagogue , Budapest, Hungary, 1872Czernowitz Synagogue ,Czernowitz , 1873Great Synagogue of Florence , Tempio Maggiore, Florence, 1874-82Princes Road Synagogue ,Liverpool , England, 1874Manchester Jewish Museum , built as aSephardic synagogue,Manchester , England, 1874Great Synagogue in Pilsen ,Pilsen , Bohemia, Czech Republic, 1888The Grand Choral Synagogue,
St. Petersburg , Russia, 1888Prešov synagogue ,Prešov , Slovakia, 1898Košice synagogue ,Košice , Slovakia, 1899, interior of Rundbogenstil buildingSarajevo Synagogue 1902Jubilee Synagogue , Prague, Czech Republic, 1906Sofia Synagogue , Sofia, Bulgaria, 1909Prešov , SlovakiaUnited States
Isaac M. Wise Temple ,( also known as thePlum Street Temple ) Cincinnati, Ohio, 1865Congregation Rodeph Shalom, Philadelphia, 1866 (no longer standing)
Temple Emanu-El, on Fifth Avenue at 43rd Street,
Congregation Emanu-El of the City of New York built in 1868, designed byLeopold Eidlitz , assisted byHenry Fernbach , (no longer standing)Temple B’nai Sholom ,Quincy, Illinois , 1870Central Synagogue , Upper East Side, Manhattan, New York, 1872Vine Street Temple ,Nashville , Tennessee, 1874B'nai Israel Synagogue (Baltimore) , Maryland, 1876Temple Adath Israel ,Owensboro , Kentucky, 1877Prince Street Synagogue (Oheb Shalom,) Newark, New Jersey, 1884Eldridge Street Synagogue , Lower East Side, Manhattan, New York, 1887Congregation Beth Israel of Portland, Oregon , 1888 (no longer standing)Park East Synagogue , Upper East Side, Manhattan, New York, 1889Gemiluth Chessed ,Port Gibson , Mississippi, 1891Temple Beth-El, Corsicana ,Corsicana , Navarro County, Texas, 1898-1900Ohabei Shalom ,Brookline, Massachusetts , 1925Congregation Ohab Zedek , Upper West Side, Manhattan, New York, 1926Congregation Rodeph Shalom, Philadelphia, 1928
hriners Temples
The
Shriners , a fraternal organization, often chose aMoorish Revival style for their Temples. Architecturally notable Shriners Temples include:*
New York City Center , now used as a concert hall* Medinah Temple, Chicago, built by architects Huehl and Schmidt in 1912.
*
Tripoli Shrine Temple , Milwaukee, Wisconsin, 1929.* Almas Temple, (1929,) 1315 O St., Washington. D.C.
* Zembo Mosque, Harrisburg, PA
Factories
* Templeton's Carpet Factory, Glasgow, Scotland, 1889
* Former Yenidze Cigarette Factory, Dresden, Germany, 1908 (here, the "minarets" are used to disguise smokestacks)ources
* Naylor, David, "Great American Movie Theaters", The Preservation Press, Washington D.C., 1987
*Thorne, Ross, "Picture Palace Architecture in Australia", Sun Books Pty. Ltd., South Melbourne, Australia, 1976Notes
Assorted examples
External links
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.