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The Appian Way

Adolphe Appia and the Scenography of Modern Architecture

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Adolphe Appia: a prominent figure in the history of modern theater, lesser known as an early “influencer” of early modernity in 20th-century architecture and aesthetics

English edition
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Title Details
By Ross Anderson
Expected release date 05.2025
Hardback
424 pages, 271 color and 73 b/w illustrations
22 x 28 cm
ISBN 978-3-03860-405-1
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Adolphe Appia (1862–1928) is a prominent figure in the history of modern theater, best known for his writings on the mise-en-scùne and stage design for the operas of Richard Wagner. Far less is known about the Swiss scenographer’s importance in twentieth-century architecture and aesthetics. The Appian Way is the definitive account of Appia’s significance in this field. It is centered on his remarkable drawings that are at once austere and atmospheric: framing a series of scenes capturing stairs, landings, platforms, and terraces, all staged before a distant horizon under a luminous sky, the drawings are generally monochrome, but the subtle hues of the paper imbue each with a distinctive, ambient undertone. Appia himself might be thought about in the same way; he was distant yet also enigmatically present in the ensuing drama of modern architecture and stage design.

Comprised of four main chapters and a coda, this engaging and accessible book is structured as a dramatic story that traces the contours of Appia’s life—his personal circumstances, convictions, aesthetic preferences, desires, and motivations—all aimed at constructing a comprehensive portrayal of his life and his work, within the horizons of his time. Appia’s drawings are reproduced here in full color, accompanied by a vast range of archival material, much of which has never been published before.

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