Illustration Credits
Frontispiece
Chapter 1
- Figure 1.1. Aspects of preservation. Image by Vanessa Reyes and Michèle V. Cloonan
- Figure 1.2. Chinese Railroad Workers Memorial Monument, Gold Run, CA. Photo by Sidney E. Berger and Michèle V. Cloonan, February 12, 2017
- Figure 1.3. The Great Sphinx of Giza, Egypt. Photo by Michèle V. Cloonan, 1980
- Figure 1.4. Tour buses and dogs near the Great Sphinx of Giza. Photo by Michèle V. Cloonan, 1980
- Figure 1.5. Minor commercial buildings and signs on The Strip, 1965, by Denise Scott Brown. Permission of MIT Press
- Figure 1.6. Stardust Hotel and Casino, 1965, by Denise Scott Brown. Permission of MIT Press
- Figure 1.7. Vietnam Wall with “offerings.” Permission of Kathy Brendel Morse, photographer
- Figure 1.8. “Powerless Structure,” by Michael Elmgreen and Ingar Dragset. From Flickr Creative Commons
- Figure 1.9. Panels from the AIDS Memorial Quilt, n.d. Permission of the NAMES Project Foundation
- Figure 1.10. “De Provincie Bamian.” Image from De Aardbol: Magazijn van heden daagsche land-en volkenkunde 9 (1839). Permission of Europeana
- Figure 1.11. Bamiyan Buddha after March 11, 2001. Permission of Europeana
- Figure 1.12. Section of the Great Wall of China, Hebei Shanhaiguan, January 28, 2013, by Yang Yueluan. Courtesy of Elmar Seibel, Ars Libri
Chapter 2
- Figure 2.1. “In the Beginning,” the Book of Kells, MS58 fol. 8r, 800 C.E. Permission of the Board of Trinity College Dublin
- Figure 2.2. The Book of Kells was formerly displayed in a less prominent area, n.d. Permission of the Board of Trinity College Dublin
- Figure 2.3. Part of today’s exhibition area, n.d. Permission of the Board of Trinity College Dublin
- Figure 2.4. The Book of Kells is a major tourist attraction, 2017. Permission of Alexa Zellentin, photographer
- Figure 2.5. Russians tearing down Yakov Sverdlov Monument, 1991. Permission of Leonard Kniffel, photographer
- Figure 2.6. Statues of Joseph Stalin and Vladimir Lenin. From Flickr Creative Commons
- Figure 2.7. Muzeon Park of Arts, 2011. Permission of Anna Okulist, photographer
- Figure 2.8. Vandalized Stalin. From Flickr Creative Commons
- Figure 2.9. “Good-bye Party Comrades!” by Antanas Sutkus, 1991. Gelatin silver print. Permission of the Art Institute of Chicago
Chapter 3
- Figure 3.1. Eleanor Roosevelt and the UDHR. Courtesy of the Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum
- Figure 3.2. The International Court of Justice, Old Building, 2014. Permission of Robert Smith, photographer
- Figure 3.3. Raphael Lemkin, back row on the far right. Permission of the United Nations Photo Library
Chapter 4
- Figure 4.1. a) Zaher Omareen, Faceless 82, n.d. b) Sulafa Hijazi, Untitled, 2012. c) Khalil Younes, Untitled 5, 2011. Permission of the artists. These images originally appeared in Syria Speaks: Art and Culture from the Frontline, ed. Malu Halasa, Zaher Omareen, and Nawara Mahfoud (London: Saqi Books, 2014).
- Figure 4.2. The Sykes-Picot Line Map (1918). Permission of the National Archives (UK)
- Figure 4.3. The Blue Shield. Courtesy of the International Committee of the Blue Shield
Chapter 5
- Figure 5.1. Louisine Havemeyer and Her Daughter Electra, 1895, by Mary Cassatt. Pastel on wove paper, 24" × 30 1/2". Photography by Bruce Schwarz. Permission of the Shelburne Museum
- Figure 5.2. Cabinet of Curiosity, Prague, 2016. Photo courtesy of Erica Ruscio, photographer
- Figure 5.3. “Portrait of Sir Thomas Phillipps,” 1860. Permission of the Grolier Club, New York City
- Figure 5.4. The Rotunda, University of Virginia (exterior and interior), 2016 and 2018. Photos courtesy of Jane Penner, photographer
- Figure 5.5. Jean Brown, n.d. Photo courtesy of Jonathan Brown
Chapter 6
- Figure 6.1. “Chicago Stock Exchange Building, Chicago, IL. Exterior Detail.” Richard Nickel, photographer. File # 201006_110816–028. Richard Nickel Archive, Ryerson and Burnham Archives. Permission of the Art Institute of Chicago
- Figure 6.2. “Chicago Stock Exchange Building, Chicago, IL. Removal of Terra-Cotta Cornice Ornament.” File # 201006_110816–009. Richard Nickel Archive, Ryerson and Burnham Archives. Permission of the Art Institute of Chicago
- Figure 6.3. “Detail, the Trading Room as Reconstructed in the Art Institute of Chicago, 1976–77, Chicago, IL.” File # 201006_120808–017. Richard Nickel Archive, Ryerson and Burnham Archives. Permission of Bob Thaw, photographer
- Figure 6.4. Plaque at the Newberry Library. Permission of Linda M. Chan, photographer
- Figure 6.5. The Mecca Hotel. Photo courtesy of the City of Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events, from the Mecca Flat Blues exhibition at the Chicago Cultural Center, February 15–May 25, 2014.
- Figure 6.6. “Nickel with Large Format Camera, Chicago, IL.” File # 201006_161213–001. Richard Nickel Archive, Ryerson and Burnham Archives. Permission of the Art Institute of Chicago
- Figure 6.7. “Adler & Sullivan, Building for Richard Knisely, 1883.” Richard Nickel, photographer. File # 201006_110815–072. Ryerson and Burnham Archives. Permission of the Art Institute of Chicago
- Figure 6.8. “H. H. Richardson’s Glessner House, 1887.” Pastel by Jane Steele, 1983. Photo: Paul Gulla; image courtesy of Suzy Steele Born
- Figure 6.9. “Marina City, Chicago, IL.” File # 200203.081229–310. Bertrand Goldberg Archive, Ryerson and Burnham Archives. Permission of the Art Institute of Chicago
- Figure 6.10. “Northwestern Memorial Hospital, Exterior View of Prentice Women’s Hospital and Maternity Center, Chicago, IL.” File # 200203.081229–421. Ryerson and Burnham Archives. Permission of the Art Institute of Chicago
Chapter 7
- Figure 7.1. Cut-and-paste fragment from the Wikipedia entry on “Copying,” in the original Arial 10.5 typeface
- Figure 7.2. Cloud computing. Graphic by Vanessa Reyes, used with permission
Chapter 8
- Figure 8.1. “How Long Is Now” (Berlin). Photograph by Michèle V. Cloonan, 2016
Chapter 9
- Figure 9.1. Portrait of John Ruskin, attributed to J. Lindsay Barry. Courtesy of the Ruskin Foundation, Ruskin Library, Lancaster University
- Figure 9.2. “Clouds-over-Skyline,” gelatin silver print, by Vik Muniz. Permission of Art © Vik Muniz/Licensed by VAGA, New York
Chapter 11
- Figure 11.1. Bust of Queen Nefertiti. Photograph, Rol Agency, France. Courtesy of Europeana
- Figure 11.2. Italian bust at the Bode Museum, damaged in the May 1945 bombings. Image by Michèle V. Cloonan, April 2016
- Figure 11.3. The dome of the Reichstag. Image by Michèle V. Cloonan, April 2016
- Figure 11.4. Brandenburg Gate, ca. 1958. From https://www.flickr.com/photos/ciagov/8048135673
- Figure 11.5. Brandenburger Tor today, 2017. Permission of Barbara G. Preece, photographer
- Figure 11.6. Memorial to the Murdered Members of the Reichstag. Photograph by Michèle V. Cloonan, April 2016
- Figure 11.7. Memorial to Heinz Sokolowski. Photograph by Michèle V. Cloonan, April 2016
- Figure 11.8. Memorial to Homosexuals (the image is projected on the inside), and exterior view, with rose. Photographs by Michèle V. Cloonan, April 2016
- Figure 11.9. Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe. Photographs by Michèle V. Cloonan, April 2016
- Figure 11.10. Detail of Shalechet (Falling Leaves), 1997–2001 by Menashe Kadishman (1932–2015). Courtesy of the artist. Collection Jewish Museum Berlin
- Figure 11.11. Sections of the Berlin Wall. Photographs by Michèle V. Cloonan, April 2016
- Figure 11.12. Kaisersaal at the Sony Center. Photograph by Michèle V. Cloonan, April 2016
- Figure 11.13. Kurfürtendam, the “Ruined Church.” Photograph by Michèle V. Cloonan, April 2016
- Figure 11.14. Hiroshimastrasse. Photograph by Michèle V. Cloonan, April 2016
List of Table
- Table 9.1 A Selection of Preservation and Conservation Activities in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries. Table by Michèle V. Cloonan