Abstract

The Poznan Guardhouse is, from an artistic point of view, a historic monument of very fine quality. It is easily recognizable due to its location at the centre of tourist routes. It is also frequently visited, and is now the seat of the Museum of the Wielkopolska Uprising 1918–1919 – a branch of the Wielkopolska Museum of the Struggle for Independence. In previous scholarly works, its design and construction have been misattributed to Johann Christian Kamsetezer, an architect of King Stanislaus Augustus. Established attributions of monuments dating from the reign of Stanislaus Augustus have been repeated many times and therefore are long-lived. Nonetheless, many of them have been made without being confirmed on the basis of source documents, or without even taking into consideration the artist’s or the epoch’s specific background. They were based on loose associations, without putting forward any arguments. Sometimes they contributed to whole sequences of attributions arising. One speculation led to another, and they were repeated in print, thereby creating ‘indisputable facts’. The Poznan Guardhouse is a good example of such a train of thought.The idea of building a brick Guardhouse in Poznan evolved in 1784, inspired by matters related to organizing the stationing of troops in Warsaw. The Boni Ordinis Committee supervised the project and Kazimierz Raczynski, the Starosta Generalny of Wielkopolska, was also personally responsible. It was Raczynski who donated funds from his personal property to supplement municipal funds derived from the property tax. He also commissioned the design to Stanislaw Zawadzki, with whom he was personally acquainted and who was also architect to the Royal Army. Major Zawadzki’s competencies included designing all the military construction projects undertaken in towns. The architectural and sculptural solutions used in the building attest to such an attribution, as they had been used previously in the architect’s work. In 1787, the Guardhouse in Poznan was built and adorned with sculptures probably made, according to Zawadzki’s designs, by the Poznan sculptor Augustinus Schops.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call