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James-Chakraborty, K. 2022. Black Lives Matter: An Architectural
Historian’s View from Europe. Architectural Histories, 10(1):
pp. 1–25. DOI: https://doi.org/10.16995/ah.8295
Black Lives Matter: An Architectural Historian’s View
from Europe
Kathleen James-Chakraborty, University College Dublin, IE, Kathleen.JamesChakraborty@ucd.ie
Black Lives Matters began in the United States, where it has included the dismantlement of
commemorations of the Confederacy, a breakaway state established to preserve slavery. In Europe it
has sparked discussions of local monuments as well as drawn unprecedented attention to the way in
which the slave trade and enslaved labour funded the construction of cities and country estates. This
now needs to be acknowledged in public space. The challenge presents an appropriate moment to
remember the ties that bind commemorative structures on both sides of the Atlantic and the impact
that tributes to European nationalism have had on diverse strands of modern American architecture.
These connections provide a back story for the newly discovered relevance, and at time effectiveness,
of representational sculpture, which they integrated into built forms that appeared to embed regimes of
all stripes in their local landscapes. Abstract counter-monuments often proved effective in addressing
the Holocaust. Substituting the human figure for the shards of a shattered past that have long been
juxtaposed in German memoryscapes with visions of a utopian future may possibly provide a means of
acknowledging the pain that runs through the cities that many of us inhabit. This in turn may prove to
be an important step on the way to building the more equitable future for which we attempt to prepare
the way as we work to decolonize our curricula.
Keywords: Confederacy; Germany; Monuments; Memorials; Nationalism; Slavery
Architectural Histories is a peer-reviewed open access journal published by the Open Library of Humanities. © 2021 The
Author(s). This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
License (CC-BY 4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original
author and source are credited. See http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.
OPEN ACCESS
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Introduction
Black lives matter. Few would disagree with that worthy sentiment, but what does
it mean to historians of architecture, and especially to those based in Europe? Such
scholars seek to explain why the built environment looks the way that it does. This
includes understanding how it was funded, the sources of the materials out of which it
was built, and what values it commemorates. Moreover, many historians of architecture
are also called upon to offer expert opinions regarding what structures should be offered
legal protection so that they remain in place, as well as how to conserve them and how
to educate the general public about them. Finally, as experts regarding the built traces
of the past, having documented processes of commemoration in public space and how
they have changed over time, we may carry this expertise into participation and helping
to craft new memoryscapes.
There are thus many paths the discipline can take to address the challenges that
Black Lives Matter poses. Although architectural historians are trained to support the
retention of cultural heritage, we can shift gears and in appropriate cases support its
removal. We also have a responsibility to draw attention to the physical traces of slavery
and colonialism that have often slipped from public consciousness. This includes
connecting the dots in new ways, as the case study given here that links neo-medieval
nationalism in Europe and white suprematism in the United States seeks to do, as well
as continuing to draw attention to existing knowledge. And we can encourage efforts
to give literal form to a more inclusive Europe. This list, which introduces the topics
covered in what follows is, however, by no means exhaustive.
The Removal of Monuments
There are many ways in which public history takes physical form. Figural statuary
has been important in this regard in Europe since antiquity and became ubiquitous
in many of the continent’s cities across the course of the 19th century. Statues have
also been the most obvious target of recent protests. Alex Fialho notes that ‘while
monuments are perceived as large-scale and longstanding, history demonstrates
that the tenuous ideologies monuments represent make them particularly susceptible
to contestation, and that the removal and destruction of monuments are often
tantamount to incitements for political change’ (2021: 19). Historians of architecture
have made important contributions to this discussion. Most notably, on 19 June 2020,
the Society of Architectural Historians, a group that more often encourages retaining
built heritage, called for the removal of monuments to the Confederacy from public
spaces across the United States (Green 2020a). While in the United States, Black Lives
Matter has sparked calls for the removal of such monuments above all when they
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memorialize figures associated with slavery, in Europe the focus has more often been
on the colonial-era exploitation of Africa. Rhodes Must Fall protests began in 2015;
these called for the statue of Cecil Rhodes to be removed from Oxford University, where
he funded prestigious scholarships (Rawlinson 2016). This followed protests the year
before that led to the removal of another Rhodes statue, this one on the campus of the
University of Cape Town in South Africa (‘Cheers and Protests’ 2015). In Belgium statues
of King Leopold II were the focus of protests in the summer of 2020 because of his role
as the proprietor of the Congo Free State. Antwerp removed its statue of him weeks
before Richmond, Virginia, in the United States, began to dismantle the Confederate
memorials on Monument Avenue (Pronczuk and Zaveri 2020).
Statues of enslavers are not as common in Europe as memorials to Confederates
are in parts of the United States, but anger against them could be just as palpable, as
the widely publicized tossing of a statue of Edward Colston into the Bristol harbour
clearly showed (Gayle 2021). The work of the Irish sculptor John Cassidy, it was erected
in 1895 in honour of Colston’s philanthropic contributions to his native city. Colston
made part of his fortune through his membership in the Royal African Company, of
which he was at one point deputy governor. It sold West Africans into slavery in the
Caribbean and along what is now the East Coast of the United States (Morgan 2020;
Nasar 2020).
Historians of architecture seldom focus explicitly upon statuary, although the
public spaces in which such statues serve as indications of shared community values
are a core subject of the discipline. Thus the way in which their meaning and the
experience of these places morph over time is one we regularly address. Throughout
history regime change and other shifts in public opinion have often been accompanied
by hostility towards monuments and buildings whose values clash with current
political realities, but monuments are more readily demolished than buildings, as the
latter can be put to often highly symbolic new purposes. A case in point is the way in
which Irish independence did and did not find physical expression in Dublin. Perhaps
the most notorious of the many Irish cases in which monuments that championed the
British state and its royal family were destroyed concerns Nelson’s Pillar in Dublin.
It was blown up on 8 and 14 March 1966, in advance of the anniversary of the Easter
Rising against the British half a century earlier. The IRA were responsible for the first
explosion; the Irish Army finished the job the following week. Dublin Castle, however,
the official site of the British viceroy in Ireland, remains intact, as does his residence in
Phoenix Park, now the seat of the Irish president.
The removal of monuments can be extremely cathartic. Bryan Clark Green, the
conservation officer of the Society of Architectural Historians, described the Confederate
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general ‘Stonewall’ Jackson being lowered from the plinth on Richmond’s Monument
Avenue, where he had been installed just over a century earlier:
It was an incredible scene. There was an enormous thunderstorm in progress. Those
there could barely see anything. People were cheering, some were just overcome
with emotion. It was so loud that at first one could not hear that the nearby church
bell — originally offered by the congregation to the Confederacy in 1864 to be melted
down for bullets — was ringing. Purchased back from the Secretary of War by a
wealthy congregant, the bell survived to herald the end of Richmond’s death grip on
the Confederacy. It was an amazing experience. (Green 2020b)
Of course, removal alone is never sufficient. A year later, Alexcia Cleveland, a local
resident, said to CNN reporter Chandelis Duster, as she watched the statue of Robert E.
Lee being taken down from the same avenue, ‘I’m glad to see it down, but I would like
to see more progress on issues such as police brutality and housing inequality’ (Duster
2021).
Traces of Slavery and Colonialism
Although Black Lives Matter challenges us to change some of the places we teach and
study, it also should prompt us to revise our understanding of multiple ways that
exploitation and appropriation are embedded in many more places. For me, these have
proved inescapable. I am the descendent of enslavers who directed the manufacture
in Richmond of ammunition and armaments used by the Confederacy. My greatgrandmother’s uncle gave the dedicatory speech when the statue of Lee was dedicated
on Monument Avenue. I grew up in a house in which enslavers had lived beside the
enslaved. Moving to Ireland did not allow me to escape associations with slavery. I now
teach at University College Dublin whose campus is named for Belfield House, which
Finola O’Kane has suggested, was probably named after a sugar plantation in Jamaica
worked by enslaved labour (2020: 150–61). The Berkeley library at Trinity College
Dublin whose collections I often consult; Berkeley College at Yale University, where as
a student I often ate with friends; and Berkeley, California, where I lived while teaching
at the eponymous university were all named for Bishop George Berkeley, an enslaver
(see First Scholarship Fund).
Meanwhile, European exploitation of Africa taints many of the buildings I teach,
including some glibly associated with social reform. Take, for example, the model
garden suburb of Port Sunlight outside Liverpool. Its paternalistic recreation of an
ideal pre-industrial village undoubtedly provided a high standard of housing for the
workers of its patron, Lord Leverhulme, the founder of Lever Brothers (Hubbard and
5
Shippobottom 2019; Lewis 2012: 93–153). However, the palm oil used in the soap the
firm manufactures originally came from West Africa along trading routes established
by nearby Liverpool’s slave traders (Sargeant 2011).1 Beginning in 1910, the company
sourced this key ingredient from the Belgian Congo, where it had a subsidiary that
relied on forced labour (Lewis 2012: 154–98; Marchal 2008).
Another building I regularly feature also challenges the equation of stylistic
innovation with social improvement. Lever Brothers entered the Congo only in
1910, after it had become a Belgian colony. Previously, the Free State had been the
personal property of King Leopold II, for whom it was run by Edmond van Eetvelde,
who commissioned Victor Horta to build him a splendid house in Brussels. It was
completed in stages between in 1897 and 1901 (Dernie and Carew-Cox 1995: 112–29)
(Figure 1). Because Horta also built the headquarters for the Belgian Labour Party, he
is often associated with progressive politics, but Belgian Art Nouveau also benefitted
enormously from its ties to a particularly exploitative regime. (Sacks 2017: 116–20;
Silverman 2011–2012). The citation for four Horta houses inscribed on the UNESCO
World Heritage List in 2000 reads, ‘The stylistic revolution represented by these works
is characterized by their open plan, the diffusion of light, and the brilliant joining of
the curved lines of decoration with the structure of the building’ (‘Major Town Houses’
2000). Here again, however, lightness was achieved at the price of African bodies and
resources, as tropical hard woods imported from the Congo joined locally produced
steel in the material palette of this building.
Other ties are less direct but still important. Scholars, including Itohan Osayimwese
(2017) and Hollyamber Kennedy (2019), have explored the relationships between
modernizing German architecture and colonialism. Casual associations between the
two persisted even after Germany was stripped of its empire at the end of World War
I. The only worker’s housing Ludwig Mies van der Rohe designed in Germany stands
on Afrikanische Strasse in Berlin (Eggler-Gerozissis 2001: 206–9). The neighbourhood
in the city’s Wedding district also includes streets named for former German colonies
in Cameroon, Togo, and Zanzibar, as well as one called Windhoek, after the German
colonial capital of what is now Namibia. Afrikanische Strasse got its name in 1906,
when exhibitions featuring ‘wild’ African women, men, and children (advertised in
that order) from the Congo were staged there (de Sousa 2017; ‘Afrikanische Viertel in
Berlin’). Although Germany’s empire was gone by the time Mies built his housing, the
street names remind us of the pride that many Germans continued to take in it across
the 20th century and beyond.
1
I thank Nicola Figgis for first pointing this out to me.
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Figure 1: Hotel van Eetvelde, Victor Horta, Brussels, Belgium, 1895–1901. Photo by EmDee, 2009.
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Belgique_-_Bruxelles_-_Hôtel_Van_Eetvelde_-_01.jpg
(https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/deed.en).
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Bruno Schmitz and Architecture in the United States
Our responsibilities as scholars include not only teaching what is already known but
asking tougher questions about how the material with which we are familiar furthers
white privilege. In my case this means thinking harder about the connections that
bind the commemoration of the Civil War to European nationalism, which turn out
to also be tied to efforts by those of European descent to naturalize their ownership
of lands wrested away from indigenous inhabitants. These connections provide as
well a precedent for the newly discovered relevance, and at time effectiveness, of
representational sculpture’s role in contemporary commemoration.
In 1889, the year before work began on Monument Avenue in Richmond, the president
of the United States, Benjamin Harrison, travelled from Washington to the midwestern
city of Indianapolis, where he had earlier served as governor of Indiana. He came
for the ground-breaking of the Indiana Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Monument (Figure 2).
Completed in 1902, it towers nearly 87 meters. It was the first Civil War memorial to
participate in the new vogue in the United States for the colossal, represented above all
by the Washington Monument, dedicated in 1884, and the Statue of Liberty, completed
two years later (Grigsby 2012). The former rose to a height of 154 meters; the later to
93. Harrison was adamant that the Indianapolis monument was to all troops from the
state of Indiana who had served on the Union side of the Civil War, during which he
himself had been promoted to the rank of brigadier general, rather than celebrating a
single hero of high rank, as the statues soon to be erected in response on Richmond’s
Monument Avenue did (‘Indiana’s War Memorial’ 1889).
The Indianapolis monument was designed by a young architect from Düsseldorf
named Bruno Schmitz. He had probably been encouraged to compete for the commission
by the members of the large German community in Indianapolis. Some of them
would have heard of his earlier victory in the competition for the Vittore Emmanuele
Monument in Rome, although in the end he did not get the commission to build it (Yeats
2020: 55–64, 278–79).
Schmitz was present for the dedication ceremony in Indianapolis in 1888, and he
returned several times to the United States in the years that followed. Although the
details of exactly what buildings he saw for himself are not clear, these trips familiarized
him with photographs at the very least of the work of the architect Henry Hobson
Richardson (Tselos 1970: 156; Yeats 2020: 57). In the last years before his premature
death in 1886, Richardson invented an architecture of permanence for a country whose
white intelligentsia were, at a time of enormous change, insecure about what they saw
as its relatively shallow past (this permanence proved elusive, however, as many of
8
Figure 2: Bruno Schmitz, Indiana Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Monument, Indianapolis, USA, 1882–1902.
Photo by alexeatswhales, 2014. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soldiers’_and_Sailors’_Monument_
(Indianapolis)#/media/File:Monument_Circle,_Indianapolis,_Indiana,_USA.jpg (https://
creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/deed.en).
9
Richardson’s buildings were demolished already before World War II). James O’Gorman
has noted of Richardson’s use of geological metaphors,
In the Rockies, Yosemite and Yellowstone were natural forms to rival the manmade landmarks of Europe. One manifestation of this idea is the constant repetition of variations on this theme, found in scientific as well as popular literature, that
American landforms were substitutes for European monuments. (1987: 94)
In commissions such as the Ames Monument to the transcontinental railroad,
completed in 1882, and the modest gate lodge he built for same family’s estate in North
Easton, Massachusetts, finished the previous year, Richardson used rusticated stone
and even loose boulders to imply that the buildings themselves were natural formations
(Figure 3). This approach also elided the violence needed to wrest these lands away
from their original inhabitants.
Figure 3: Ames Gate Lodge, Henry Hobson Richardson, North Easton, Massachusetts, USA, 1881.
Photo by Daderot, 2007. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ames_Gate_Lodge#/media/File:Ames_
Gate_Lodge_(North_Easton,_MA)_-_general_view.jpg (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/
by-sa/3.0/deed.en).
10
Admiration for the Romanesque was widespread in 19th-century Germany, and
architectural historians have discerned German influences upon Richardson’s adoption
of it (Curren 2003). During the early years of Kaiser Wilhelm II’s reign, its use by German
nationalists stemmed in part from the fact that it had been the style of the period in
which the Holy Roman Emperors ruled from the territory of the newly united Germany,
rather than from Vienna and Prague, cities that at the end of the nineteenth century
belonged to the Austro-Hungarian empire (Lane 2000: 73–78, 203–28; Mai 1997: 156).
Schmitz did not need Richardson’s example to master an indigenous German style.
Instead, what he learned from Richardson was how to imply that a building, or in his
case a monument, had emerged organically out of the local landscape. This in turn
embedded the new German nation, created only in 1871, into sites that connected to
histories of earlier empires and of victories over the French.
Upon his return to Germany from the United States, Schmitz almost immediately
competed successfully for commissions for three of the largest and most prestigious
monuments ever erected in Germany; a fourth, finished only in 1913, eventually
followed. The first three celebrate Emperor Wilhelm I, who died in 1888, seventeen
years after presiding over German unification at the end of the Franco-Prussian war.
The Kyffhäuser Monument (1892–96), the Westphalian Province’s Monument to
Wilhelm at Porta Westfalica (1892–96), the Rhine Province’s Monument to Wilhelm at
the German Corner in Koblenz, and the Battle of the Nations Monument (1898–1913) in
Leipzig (Hutter 1990; Mai 1997; Busch 2010; Yeats 2020) sit somewhat uncomfortably
between the historicism of much 19th-century German architecture and the clear break
with the past created by early-20th-century reformers such as Henry van de Velde.
Although the overt nationalism of Schmitz’s monuments foreshadows the scale and
scenography of Nazi spectacles, they are distinctly different in both form and political
orientation.
Schmitz’s monuments are distinguished by three features that did not figure
prominently in Indianapolis. The first is the use throughout of rusticated stone that
makes his work appear to emerge organically out of the site, which is either located in
nature or, if in a city, well away from other buildings. This he clearly got from Richardson.
The second is the scale of the free-standing sculptures of Wilhelm I. Here the impact
upon him of the Statue of Liberty, which he would have seen as he sailed into New York
harbour, is clear. The third are the sculptures that, although executed by others, are
integral to the architecture out of which they appear to grow. Many are clearly based
upon what were then the relatively recently excavated ancient Mesopotamian statuary
from sites like Ashurnasirpal II’s Palace at Nimrud in what is now Iraq. Uncovered
beginning in 1845, much of this material is now divided between museums in Asia,
11
Europe and North America, including Berlin, where Schmitz was living (CDLI n.d.). This
art historical choice reinforces the geological metaphor in its evocation of what was
understood at the time to be some of the world’s earliest monumental architecture.
The Battle of the Nations Monument undoubtedly accounts for much of Schmitz’s
influence in the United States (Figure 4). At a height of more than 90 meters, it remains
the tallest of all European memorials. It was also the most resolutely modern in the use
Schmitz made of reinforced concrete, although this was largely hidden from view by
rusticated stone cladding. Lacking the hilltop sites on which the Kyffhäuser and Porta
Westfalica monuments had been built, Schmitz here created an artificial mound into
which he appeared to sink the monument. He ringed the entire complex, including the
large forecourt, with a hillock capped with trees. The apparent integration with nature
is thus intensified here, although the landscape is entirely manmade.
Figure 4: Bruno Schmitz, Battle of the Nations Monument, Leipzig, Germany, 1896–1913. Photo
by Kel207, 2016. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monument_to_the_Battle_of_the_Nations#/
media/File:VölkerschlachtdenkmalLeipzig.jpg (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/
deed.en).
Schmitz’s monuments were seen at the time as contributing to national integration.
Koblenz was where the Treaty of Verdun, dividing Charlemagne’s empire into thirds,
had been drawn up; furthermore, his Koblenz site had been a 13th-century stronghold
of the Teutonic Knights. The memorial in Porta Westfalica signalled the return of largely
Catholic Westphalia to the Prussian Protestant patriotic fold after the Kulturkampf of
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the 1870s (Busch 2010: 32–33, 48). Kyffhäuser stands atop a site strongly associated
with the medieval Holy Roman Emperor Friedrich I, known as Barbarossa (Mai 1997:
156). And the Battle of the Nations celebrated a joint Russian and Prussian victory over
Napoleon, as well as over the local Saxons (Loest 1984). Moreover, the fusion of myth,
monument, and art present in these places provided a stage-set for the emergence of
new forms of nationalism rooted not only in the experience of particular landscapes but
also in the emotions fostered by the way in which Schmitz’s structures framed them
(Mai 1997: 137–47; Yeats 182–83). This was something that would appeal to architects
and artists working in the United States. At the same time, it should be remembered
that, as Aruna D’Souza has declared, monuments ‘are not a product of consensus but
are constructed in order to make manifest the most raw, the most contested, the most
partisan declarations of power and strength’ (2021: 31). This was particularly true of
the Battle of the Nations Monument, which commemorated a battle in which the local
Saxons had been defeated, and a form of German nationalism that was being actively
challenged at the time by the rise of the Social Democratic Party.
At least three major figures — Frank Lloyd Wright, Bertram Goodhue, and Gutzon
Borglum — infused their designs for buildings and sculptures in the United States
with lessons absorbed directly or indirectly from Schmitz’s Leipzig monument,
which Wright probably saw for himself. The range of these works and of their political
associations reveals, however, that just as Schmitz put Richardson’s geologically
infused Romanesque to new uses, so, too, could those who borrowed from him and
his collaborators employ what they had learned from him to serve diverse purposes.
Although their politics varied, in all cases the intent was at least in part to naturalize
white inhabitation of land that people of European descent had begun to occupy in large
numbers only in the 19th century.
Anthony Alofsin has documented the impact the sculpture at the Battle of the
Nations Monument had upon Wright’s approach to architectural sculpture (1994:
127–33). The possible influence of Schmitz’s deft siting of it has been overlooked,
however. Taliesin, the house Wright built for himself in 1911, represented a bold new
chapter in his integration of architecture and landscape (Levine 1996: 75–111). Many
of the strategies he adopted here have precedents in Richardson’s work, but Wright
had not previously used rusticated stone in this way, while the cutting of the building
into the brow of the hill is more sophisticated than anything Richardson had done, but
very much in the spirit of Schmitz. The implication that the house had emerged out
of the hillside supported both Wright’s relationship with Mamah Borthwick and his
family’s ownership of land that had as recently as the 1830s been occupied by Native
Americans.
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The second house Wright built for Herbert and Katherine Jacobs, completed in 1948,
nearly four decades after the first iteration of Taliesin, is best known as a pioneering
example of solar design (Jacobs and Jacobs 1979). But the way in which Wright anchored
it into the ground goes much further than what Richardson did in the Ames Gate Lodge,
which sits on a flat piece of land (Figure 5). By this stage in his career, Wright probably
no longer consciously evoked the Battle of the Nations Monument. His understanding
of organic architecture, and ours in turn of critical regionalism, in which buildings are
often visibly tied to particular places, nonetheless remain inflected by the expression of
ownership that was by this time assumed rather than contested.
Figure 5: Herbert and Katherine Jacobs House, Frank Lloyd Wright, Madison, Wisconsin, USA,
1948. Photo by TheCatalyst31, 2017. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herbert_and_Katherine_
Jacobs_Second_House#/media/File:Herbert_and_Katherine_Jacobs_Second_House,_northeast_
entrance.jpg (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/deed.en).
Nor was this the only context in which Schmitz’s influence could be seen in the
United States. Upon his death in 1924, Bertram Goodhue was widely hailed as having
been the country’s greatest living architect. This was a stature Wright was widely
accorded only a decade later. Goodhue’s Nebraska State Capitol (1920–32) in Lincoln
clearly references schemes by the Finnish architect Eliel Saarinen, who moved to
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the United States in 1923 (Oliver 1983). Saarinen’s interest in ziggurat-like massing,
visible in his 1908 design for an unrealized Finnish Parliament, and in buildings like
the Helsinki Central Station, completed in 1909, out of which human figures appear
to grow, can in turn be traced back to Schmitz’s work in Leipzig (Yeats 2020: 96–98).
Moreover, the sculptural program in Lincoln, executed by Lee Lawrie, best known for
his statue of Atlas at Rockefeller Center in New York, naturalises the white settlement
in the 1850s of Nebraska (African-Americans are depicted only in the context of their
emancipation), while acknowledging its former inhabitants (Luebke 1990). One text
reads, ‘Honour to pioneers who broke the sod that men to come might live’. Another
names the peoples whom the so-called pioneers displaced above a bison whose body
bears the Navajo text, ‘In beauty I walk, with beauty before me I walk, with beauty
behind me I walk, with beauty above and about me I walk’.
Finally, the example of Stone Mountain ties Schmitz back to commemoration of
the Civil War, but now of the Confederacy rather than the Union. Stone Mountain was
originally conceived by Gutzon Borglum, who went on to initiate Mount Rushmore
(Shaff and Shaff 1985; Freeman 1997; Hale 1998; Thompson 2022). In 1821 control of
the part of Georgia that includes Stone Mountain was wrenched away from its original
inhabitants. Plans to place statues of Confederate figures on the face of the mountain
were first voiced in 1914. Although Borglum only carved a head of Robert E. Lee, the
original conception was his (Figure 6). The style of carving on Stone Mountain owed
less to Nimrud or the Battle of the Nations Monument than was the case in Lincoln,
Nebraska, but the scale of ambition and the integration of historical figures with live
rock were almost certainly stimulated by an awareness of Schmitz, with whose work
Borglum may have become familiar when he was in Paris from 1890 to 1893 and in
London from 1896 to 1901. It is also likely that some of his Georgia patrons had seen
Schmitz’s work on trips to Germany or became aware of them by reading travel
literature. Borglum’s outsize ego undoubtedly further enhanced the appeal of working
in the manner initiated by Schmitz.
As completed by Henry Augustus Lukeman and others, the figures of Jefferson Davis,
Lee, and Jackson on horseback striding across the face of the mountain comprise the
largest memorial to the Confederacy, although it lacked the reflecting pool proposed
by Borglum that clearly echoed the forecourt of the Battle of the Nations Monument.
Stone Mountain was conceived and finished in the context of local outpourings of racist
hate. In 1913 Leo Frank, who was Jewish, was lynched in nearby Marietta. Two years
later Caroline Helen Jemison Plane, the honorary life president of the Georgia Division
of the United Daughters of the Confederacy, approached Borglum to ask whether he
would be interested in carving the proposed memorial. In the same year the Ku Klux
15
Klan was re-founded atop the mountain, where it would rally annually for decades to
come. Borglum joined the Klan in an unsuccessful attempt to keep the Stone Mountain
commission. The effort to finally finish Stone Mountain was a direct response to the Civil
Rights movement. After the state of Georgia acquired the land, the resulting state park
was open to the public in 1965 on the centennial of Abraham Lincoln’s assassination,
with the memorial finally dedicated in 1970 in the presence of Georgia governor Jimmy
Carter and Vice President Spiro Agnew.
Figure 6: Confederate Memorial, Henry Augustus Lukeman et al., Stone Mountain, Georgia, USA,
1914–1970. Photo by Diego Deiso, 2009. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Stone_
Mountain-Georgia-USA0992.JPG (CC BY-SA).
The story of Schmitz’s role in American memorial culture, which commenced
when he won the competition for an outsize monument to the defenders of the
Union, concluded nearly a century later with an even larger Confederate memorial,
almost certainly inconceivable without the example of the nationalist monuments
he had erected back in Germany using lessons drawn from his American experience.
Although more democratically minded architects made arguably less offensive use
of the paradigm he established, these examples should cause us to think twice about
what architects and their clients are doing when they attempt to create a strong sense
of place that denies other people’s legitimate claims to territory and to rights, as well
16
as about the degree to which supposedly site-specific products of nationalism are,
perhaps paradoxically, often transnational.
From Counter-Monuments to Figuration?
Finally, the centrality of figural sculpture to recent debates over commemoration
challenges historians of architecture who respond to Black Lives Matter by participating
in the discussions around the formation of new commemorative environments, to think
about the degree to which reckoning with the ways in which Europe has been shaped by
enslavement and colonialism may require different strategies than counter-monuments
(see Young (1993) for the coining of this term). Although James Young and others,
including Andreas Huyssen, understand the approach that Daniel Libeskind, for example,
took in his Jewish Museum, as a quintessentially postmodern strategy, its origins lie in
postwar juxtapositions of historicist fabric with an Expressionist-infused modernism,
as seen in the partial reconstruction by Egon Eiermann of the Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial
Church in Berlin (Figure 7) (Young 2002; Huyssen 2003; Kappel 2007; James-Chakraborty
2018). Developed to commemorate German suffering, after German reunification this
relatively abstract strategy was subsequently applied in the construction of buildings
and monuments that acknowledged the crimes of the Third Reich.
But if monuments matter, so, it turns out, do bodies. A powerful source for the
abstraction of many of Berlin’s memorial landscapes was the Vietnam War Memorial
in Washington, D.C., designed by Maya Lin and completed in 1983. Lin’s monument
is anchored in her appreciation of land art but also, quite crucially, of the imprint the
Hopewell Mound culture left on the Ohio landscape in which she grew up (Min 2009:
198–99). While the completely conventional statues eventually added to it contribute
little if anything to its emotional impact, the situation is quite different at the National
Memorial for Peace and Justice in Montgomery, Alabama, commissioned by the Equal
Justice Initiative and designed in collaboration with MASS Design Group (Figure 8).
The memorial itself appears abstract but in fact is didactic in much the same way
that Libeskind’s Jewish Museum in Berlin is. Inside the building is a display of soil
samples from counties in which lynchings took place. Outside, Kwame Akoto-Bamfo’s
statue is intended to remind visitors of the tribulations of slavery; another sculpture
by Hank Willis Thomas references contemporary police brutality (Cotter 2018). Here
the presence of the human figure is integral to a memorial to the many Blacks who
were lynched in the United States, often for crimes they did not commit. Substituting
the human figure for the shards of a shattered past that have long been juxtaposed in
German memoryscapes with visions of a utopian future may possibly provide a means
of acknowledging the pain that runs through the cities that many of us inhabit.
17
Figure 7: Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church, Franz Schwechten, and Egon Eiermann, Berlin, Germany,
1895, 1961. Photo by GerardM, 2004. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Gedächtniskirche1.jpg
(https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/deed.en).
18
Figure 8: National Memorial For Peace and Justice for the Equal Justice Initiative, MASS Design
Group, sculpture by Kwame Akoto-Bamfo, Montgomery, Alabama, USA, 2018. Photo by Equal
Justice Initiative, n.d. https://drive.google.com/file/d/1htiFnna-lq4Lw0qux2KpCjYPZVc4zcGk/
view?usp=sharing. With permission of the Equal Justice Initiative.
While this in turn may prove to be an important step on the way to building a more
equitable future for ourselves and our students, representing such violence may simply
re-enact it (Alexander 2004: 175–205; Baker 2015: 94–108; D’Souza 2018; Wilson 2020).
Christina Sharpe has argued that ‘in the face of Black people’s continued eviction from
the category of the human, we should not mistake the erection of the monument or
memorial for repair, or for the end horizon of something like justice or the fulfillment
of something like liberation’ (Sharpe 2021: 27). She continues:
No matter the intention, every monument or memorial to atrocities against Black
people already contains its failure. Because they are projects of reform and not radical projects, they do not imagine new worlds. They stage encounters. But for whom?
Who is the subject seen to be coming to terms with an ongoing brutality imagined
as past and then reimagined as an aesthetic project? Who are the subjects imagined
as witness and participant in the encounter, and who is imagined by being moved
by the encounter and to what end? How is such movement facilitated or inhibited
by its architectures? The monument or memorial is a staged encounter in which the
terrible grammars of the past, though disrupted, still remain.
19
Whether or not figural representation is the direction in which commemoration should
head in the case of acknowledging slavery and lynching, it has certainly been effective
in other European contexts. I first became cognizant of the power it can still have in
another context, that of the fight to legalize abortion in Ireland. A single photograph
of the married Indian-born dentist Savita Halappanavar up-ended the terms of the
debate (James-Chakraborty 2016: 138–52) (Figure 9). Halappanavar died of sepsis
when miscarrying a wanted daughter, because the doctor treating her would not abort
the non-viable foetus as long as it had a heartbeat. Putting a beautiful, demonstrably
middle class and implicitly neither Catholic nor Protestant face on a discussion that had
previously been focused on images of foetuses was transformative.
Figure 9: Mural of Savita Halappanavar, Dublin, Ireland, May 2018. Photo by Zcbeaton, 2018.
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Savita_Halappanavar_mural,_Dublin.jpg (https://
creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/deed.en).
Not all of the few monuments to European culpability for the slave trade and for
colonial exploitation of Africa take a figural approach, however. The Memorial to the
Abolition of Slavery, for instance, in Nantes, France, completed in 2012, is clearly a
counter-monument (Figure 10). Although low ceiling heights are intended to recall
the cramped conditions on slave ships, its purpose is made clear, not so much through
20
the forms nestled into the quay along the Loire river, but through texts, a strategy
supplemented by a public path lined with information boards on French abolitionism
that links the memorial to a permanent exhibition on the slave trade in the city’s history
museum. Visitors read that the memorial, designed by Krzysztof Wodiczko and Julian
Bonder, ‘stands in the public space as a reminder to prevent repression of the facts,
concealment and forgetting. It is a call to be vigilant in the face of the contemporary
forms of slavery in France and in the world’ (Musée d’histoire de Nantes). Along the
way, they also pass plaques that draw attention to the many ships that set out from
Nantes to participate in the lucrative trade, while signage identifies local buildings
erected with the profits of these expeditions.
Figure 10: The Memorial to the Abolition of Slavery, Krzysztof Wodiczko and Julian Bonder,
Nantes, France, 2012. Parcours méditatif. Le Mémorial de l’abolition de l’esclavage. Nantes ©
Jean-Dominique Billaud — Nautilus/LVAN. Copyright: Jean-Dominique Billaud — Nautilus/LVAN,
Nantes.
Statues of Blacks are also beginning to populate Europe’s cities in ways intended
to encourage pride rather than reproduce suffering. A case in point is La Vaughn Belle
and Jeanette Ehler’s ‘I Am Queen Mary’ erected in 2018 in front of the Danish West
Indian Warehouse in Copenhagen; fundraising continues for a permanent version
in bronze. Its creators note that it was ‘timed to be unveiled in the centennial year
commemorating the 100th anniversary of Denmark’s sale of the Virgin Islands to the
21
United States’ and ‘challenges Denmark’s role in slavery and commemoration of its
colonial history by centring the stories and agency of those who were brought to the
Danish West Indies and demonstrates how artists can be leaders in this conversation’
(I Am Queen Mary). Particularly notable here is the emphasis on female empowerment
at a time when most historical rather than allegorical figures in public space continue
to be male. A generation after abolition, Mary Thomas was one of the women who in
1878 led a revolt in St. Croix against the working conditions of former slaves and their
descendants. Her pose here is clearly inspired by an iconic photograph of Black Panther
leader Huey Newton, taken in 1968 by Blair Stapp, although the weapons she holds are
derived from a 19th-century print.
Those of us engaging in the creation of new commemorative landscapes must be
ready to move beyond established paradigms. We must also recognize that having
a commitment to building more inclusive societies includes a willingness to work
with those whose tastes may differ quite radically from our own. Whether or not we
personally choose to enter into these discussions, however, we face the challenge of
supporting such societies by paying more attention in our scholarship and our teaching
to the relationship between the exploitation of Black bodies and the built environment.
This includes admitting how iconic buildings from which we have derived considerable
aesthetic and intellectual pleasure are nonetheless expressions of cultural, economic,
and political systems that have encouraged or profited from such exploitation. These
stories are moreover too important to stay buried on the shelves of university libraries
and the pages of peer-reviewed journals available only through online subscriptions.
They need to be integrated into basic survey courses and into public outreach that
furthers awareness of the degree to which all Europeans have, if often unwittingly,
benefitted from these legacies. This can be one small step towards ensuring that Black
Lives Matter.
22
Author’s Note
This text is based on my opening address to the 2021 EAHN meeting. I thank Aruna d’Souza, Luke
Fidler, Juliet Koss, Jeffrey Moser, Thaïsa Way, two anonymous peer reviewers and my editors for their
many helpful comments. The revisions were begun during the time that I was an Ailsa Mellon Bruce
Senior Fellow at the Center for Advanced Study of the Visual Arts at the National Gallery of Art. This
project has received funding from the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union’s
Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme (grant agreement No 101019419).
Competing Interests
The author has no competing interests to declare.
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