Plaster Casts

The Glasgow School of Art’s holdings include around 220 plaster casts, ranging from full-size reproductions of Greek, Roman, medieval, and Renaissance European sculptures to smaller-scale architectural and decorative details, as well as a selection of casting moulds. Up until 2014, GSA’s plaster casts were located in the Mackintosh Building and other campus buildings. Now, many of GSA’s larger-scale casts are in the Reid Building and the Stow Building.

Our archives trace the importance of plaster casts to teaching since the School’s founding in 1845. The first major inventory dates to 1849[1], and the plaster casts listed include a complete grouping of the Laocoön. Along with gifts and donations, acquisitions continued from the second half of the 19th century to at least the 1920s. Inventories and catalogues show that suppliers for direct purchases included D. Brucciani & Co., the Glasgow-based firm Giusti & Co., and workshops in Paris, Brussels, and Berlin.

Read more...

Photographs in the 1900 inventory show plaster casts within the Mackintosh Building’s studios and corridors, with architectural and decorative examples vying for space with anatomical and sculptural specimens, right down to plaster fruits and vegetables[2]. New acquisitions in 1901 included a central figure of the Laocoön (presumably to replace the previous complete grouping)[3], and a 1909 document records a debate on how to order and display the collection.[4]

Drawing from casts was central to the structured art, design, and architecture education known as the South Kensington system. In 1901, GSA moved to a new curriculum overseen by the Scotch Education Department, and prospectuses under Francis Newbery’s directorate show that the approach held firm. Even as the pedagogical importance of casts declined, room records of the 1950s and 60s list large-scale items, as well as sundries such as ‘David’s Eyes, Nose, Mouth and Ear (1 each)’.[5] Alasdair Gray’s Lanark (1981) and Murray Grigor’s Mackintosh (1968) offer vivid glimpses of how the plaster casts remained a backdrop to the life of the School.

More recently, the casts have inspired creative responses amongst GSA staff and students that echo and expand on those from more than a century ago. In 2008-2010, the Mackintosh Building plaster casts were cleaned and conserved, albeit with no attempt to remove the layers of paint many had received in their lifetime.

After the fire of 2014, Graciela Ainsworth Conservation led a campaign to stabilise a selection of damaged casts, including the Laocoön and the Cantoria Panels, to striking visual effect. Furthermore, the Digital Laocoön project (GSA School of Simulation & Visualisation and ISO Design) explores the affective power of the replica in augmented and virtual reality.

With plaster casts integrated into the campus and our significant archival and creative material, we continue to reflect on and research the role of plaster reproductions in the context of a thought-provoking collection.

Introduction by:
Dr Thea Stevens
Academic Development Lead
School of Design & Academic Coordinator: Interdisciplinarity
School of Design
The Glasgow School of Art

Highlights

Plaster Casts · 19th century - 20th century
Plaster Casts · 19th century - 20th century
Plaster Casts · Collection of cast reliefs · 19th century
Collection of cast reliefs · 19th century
Plaster Casts · Chest containing collection of cast reliefs · 19th century
Chest containing collection of cast reliefs · 19th century
Ceramic sarcophagus cast · [19th century]
Ceramic sarcophagus cast · [19th century]
The Giusti Plaster Cast Collection · Late 19th century - mid 20th century
The Giusti Plaster Cast Collection · Late 19th century - mid 20th century
Plaster cast, creator unknown · c1900-1920
Plaster cast, creator unknown · c1900-1920
Plaster Casts · Casts of medals commemorative of British history · 20th century
Casts of medals commemorative of British history · 20th century
Plaster Casts · Inventories and Insurances · 1844-1976
Inventories and Insurances · 1844-1976
Plaster Casts · Sculptured nativity scene · c1900
Sculptured nativity scene · c1900
Plaster cast, by John Laurie · 1970
Plaster cast, by John Laurie · 1970