John Wiley & Sons Re-Imagining the Avant-Garde Cover The 1960s and 1970s avant-garde has been likened to an 'architectural Big Bang', such was the intens.. Product #: 978-1-119-50685-0 Regular price: $35.42 $35.42 Auf Lager

Re-Imagining the Avant-Garde

Revisiting the Architecture of the 1960s and 1970s

Butcher, Matthew / Pearson, Luke C. (Herausgeber)

Architectural Design

Cover

1. Auflage Juli 2019
144 Seiten, Softcover
Handbuch/Nachschlagewerk

ISBN: 978-1-119-50685-0
John Wiley & Sons

Jetzt kaufen

Preis: 37,90 €

Preis inkl. MwSt, zzgl. Versand

Weitere Versionen

pdf

The 1960s and 1970s avant-garde has been likened to an 'architectural Big Bang', such was the intensity of energy and ambition in which it exploded into the postwar world. Marked out by architectural projects that redefined the discipline, it remains just as influential today. References to the likes of Archizoom, Peter Eisenman, John Hejduk and Superstudio abound. Highly diverse, the avant-garde cannot be defined as a single strand or tendency. It was divergent geographically - reaching from Europe to North America and Japan - and in its political, formal and cultural preoccupations. It was unified, though, as a critical and experimental force, critiquing contemporary society against the backdrop of extreme social and political upheaval: the Paris riots of May 1968, the anti-Vietnam war movement in America and the looming ecological crisis.

Re-imagining the Avant-garde outlines how in contemporary architectural practice, avant-garde projects retain their power as historical precedents, as barometers of a particular design ethos, as critiques of society and instigators of new formal techniques. Given the far-reaching impact of the subsequent digital revolution, which has since reshaped every aspect of practice, the issue asks why this historical period continues to retain its undeniable grip on current architecture.

Contributors: Pablo Bronstein and Sam Jacob, Sarah Deyong, Stylianos Giamarelos, Damjan Jovanovic, Andrew Kovacs, Perry Kulper, Igor Marjanovic, William Menking, Michael Sorkin, Neil Spiller and Mimi Zeiger.

Featured architects: Archizoom, Andrea Branzi, Jimenez Lai, Luis Miguel (Koldo) Lus Arana (Klaus), NEMESTUDIO, Superstudio and UrbanLab.

Chapter 1

Enduring Experiments: How the Architectural Avant-Garde Lives On

Chapter 2 Superstudio as Super-Office: The Labour of Radical Design

Chapter 3 Function Follows Form: Some Affinities Between Pure Icons, Hardcore Architecture

Chapter 4 Avant-Garde in the Age of Identity: Alvin Boyarsky, the Architectural Association and the Impact of Pedagogy

Chapter 5 The Little Big Planet of Architectural Imagination: An Interview with NEMESTUDIO's Neyran Turan

Chapter 6 Feedback Loops: Or, Past Futures Haunt Architecture's Present

Chapter 7 ArChapterive of Affinities: Making Architecture from Architecture

Chapter 8 Avant-Garde Legacies: A Spirited Flâneur

Chapter 9 System Cities: Building a 'Quantitative Utopia'

Chapter 10 The Function of Utopia

Chapter 11 Feverish Delirium: Surrealism, Deconstruction and Numinous Presences

Chapter 12 Behind the Wheel: Charles Darwin and Superstudio Do the Driving

Chapter 13 Play it Again: In Conversation with Architect Sam Jacob and Artist Pablo Bronstein

Chapter 14 Architecture Between the Panels: Comics, Cartoons and Graphic Narrative in the (New) Neo Avant-Garde

Chapter 15 Copying as Cultural Iconoclasm

Chapter 16 Anticipating the Digital: The Game of Supersurface

Chapter 17 Counterpoint - What Comes After the Avant-Garde?
Matthew Butcher is an academic, writer and designer. His work has been exhibited at the V&A Museum in London, the Storefront for Art and Architecture in New York and the Prague Quadrennial, Prague. Matthew is also the editor and founder of the architectural newspaper P.E.A.R.: Paper for Emerging Architectural Research. Senior Lecturer in Design at the Bartlett School of Architecture (UCL), he is Director of the Undergraduate Architecture Programme. He has contributed articles and papers to a wide selection of architectural journals and magazines.

Luke Caspar Pearson is a designer and Lecturer in Architecture at the Bartlett School of Architecture (UCL), where he runs undergraduate and postgraduate design studios. He is the founding partner of You+Pea, a design research practice and the co-founder of Drawing Futures, an international conference. He has recently established REALMS, a new Bartlett funded initiative exploring the relationship between architecture and video-game design. Luke's work and writing has featured in architectural journals and magazines.