LOOK INSIDE: Twentieth Century Architecture and Modernity

Page 1

ORO Editions

Publishers of Architecture, Art, and Design

Gordon Goff: Publisher

www.oroeditions.com

info@oroeditions.com

Published by ORO Editions

Copyright © 2022 Patrizia Mello.

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including electronic, mechanical, photocopying or microfilming, recording, or otherwise (except that copying permitted by Sections 107 and 108 of the U.S. Copyright Law and except by reviewers for the public press) without written permission from the publisher.

You must not circulate this book in any other binding or cover and you must impose this same condition on any acquirer.

Book Design:

ORO Project Editor: Kirby Anderson

10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 First Edition

ISBN: 978-1-954081-90-1

Color Separations and Printing: ORO Group Ltd. Printed in China.

ORO Editions makes a continuous effort to minimize the overall carbon footprint of its publications. As part of this goal, ORO Editions, in association with Global ReLeaf, arranges to plant trees to replace those used in the manufacturing of the paper produced for its books. Global ReLeaf is an international campaign run by American Forests, one of the world’s oldest nonprofit conservation organizations. Global ReLeaf is American Forests’ education and action program that helps individuals, organizations, agencies, and corporations improve the local and global environment by planting and caring for trees.

Presentation First part ARCHITECTURE AND MODERNITY/MODERNITY: A MIRAGE, A BUNDLE OF REFLECTIONS Second part CONTEMPORARY MODERNISMS. OUR PAST, OUR PRESENT Critical functionalism as a form of creativity Society building/Building society Society at its best, architecture at its minimum Supra-city. Make circulation habitable Form follows people. The city as an urban living room “Porous Cities”: A catalog of solutions for urban/human survival For a philosophy of the present An era of Rembrandt beauty Bibliography Contents 5 9 93 96 107 122 134 154 161 171 181 189

to my son

If one were to describe the architecture of the 20th century in one word, the first thing that comes to mind is the concept of “modernity.” It is with “modernity” that it has imposed itself on the attention of the masses, very quickly forming their most intimate desires, promising and experimenting with solutions, discussing possible futures, and progressively expanding its influence on the flow of daily life.

But in what terms has “modernity” actually unfolded in the design field and in what way? This is a question that must take into consideration the variety of interpretations with which its character has been identified over time, through intense debates, absolutizations, and sensational misunderstandings (particularly in reference to the experiences of the Modern Movement which consecrated its rise and to the so-called “post-modernity” which ineptly celebrated its unlikely disappearance).

Above all, what were the significant stages and how, in some cases, was the initial effervescence undermined, gradually leading to forms of closure rather than opening to the world? Furthermore, how can we frame the idea of modernity with respect to our present?

To do answer these questions, the book highlights the interpretations of scholars such as Octavio Paz and Marshall Berman who, in not-so-distant times, first of all touched on key aspects of the theme (modernity as tradition, search, criticism, place of contradictions . . .) contributing—after having translated thinking in the design field—to the outline of a sort of identikit of what happened to architecture in relation to the concept of “modernity.” In fact, the same considerations intersect with those of wellknown architects in the field of design and are closely linked to the theses of a historian and critic of architecture such as John Summerson.

5
Presentation

In a brilliant essay from 1941, The Mischievous Analogy, the latter had already exhaustively clarified what would happen to architecture in the coming future, in other words the present, by introducing the concept of “architecture tout court.” Several years later, he then went so far as to decree the existence of a “theory of modern architecture” (The Case for a Theory of ‘Modern’ Architecture, 1957) that was linked to the program and therefore to the passage of time according to a concept of architecture that was objectively far from stylistic speculations or other evanescent theories of a “formal” nature that would ignore the “contents” of the present, the needs of man, and the evolution of his identity.

And it is within the very heart of the present that both Paz’s and Berman’s energies are concentrated, in view of a strategic critical acceleration to give it a face, in an attempt to enhance it by recovering the “open” and often “contradictory visions” that characterized “modernity” at the end of the 19th century. It was these visions that could help us grasp the dimension of contemporary life with more ease and awareness, considering the long echo that the questions posed by modernity would leave in the air long after those who asked them and their own answers disappeared from the scene.

This is how, in the second part of the book, in a real relationship of continuity with the present, we get to outline some “contemporary modernisms.” In other words, those manifestations in the design field that more than others characterize the built environment today “in a modern sense,” especially regarding those aspects that further an additional bond with the social, so as to become a valid ally to constantly review the results achieved and offer new possibilities that allow us to adjust to events, including those related to the appearance of a virus that has devasted our way of life.

6
8 FIRST PART

ARCHITECTURE AND MODERNITY/MODERNITY: A MIRAGE, A BUNDLE OF REFLECTIONS

We pursue modernity in its incessant metamorphoses, yet we never manage to trap her.

There is no finality in architecture—only continuous change.

“Modernity” 1 is a recurring theme in the architectural field and, from the mid-19th century, when cities changed their faces whether one liked it or not, it became a sort of obsession and encouraged the most diverse manifestations that have marked the history of architecture until today. Not surprisingly, in 2014, one of the sharpest and most cynical minds of contemporaneity, Rem Koolhaas (1944), entitled one of the sections of the Architecture Biennale Absorbing Modernity: 1914–2014. 2 Here he let us glimpse the repercussions over time, like a red thread that courageously unravels everywhere, changing, taking on new meanings, or more simply camouflaging itself in the bizarre scenario of contemporary urban stratifications. The city, in fact, was—and still is—the mechanism, the hero of modernity, which designed its features to the point of exploding the most intimate reasons for its far-sighted survival; the more the nature of the collective grows through diversification, the more modernity is articulated and developed, leaving the past behind. A cumbersome past that you soon realize you can do without.

In a brilliant essay from 1941,3 John Summerson (1904–1992) stated that

1 Bear in mind that the Latin root of the word “modern” is linked to the adverb “manner” (‘now; recently’), and it is in this broad sense that I will refer to it throughout the text.

2 Fundamentals is the title of the 14th International Architecture Exhibition, directed by Koolhaas (Venice, June 7–November 23, 2014), consisting of three main sections: Absorbing Modernity: 1914–2014/National Participations; Monditalia/Arsenale (a scan of Italy consisting of 82 films, 41 research projects, characterized by the fusion of architecture with the Dance, Music, Theatre and Cinema sectors of the Biennale); Elements of Architecture/Central Pavilion (ancient, past, present, and future examples of the main architectural elements compared in rooms each dedicated to a single element). See AA.VV., Fundamentals, catalog of the 14th International Architecture Exhibition (Venice: Marsilio, 2014).

3 John Summerson, “The Mischievous Analogy,” (1941), Domus, no. 702, (February 1989): 17–28.

9

in the 19th century it was still legitimate to ask whether there was an architecture of one’s time, since at the time the Greek, Roman or Gothic style was still copied. In the 20th century, however, it would no longer make sense as, since the beginning of the 20th century, there have been a number of projects in the world related to “modernity” that allow us to affirm that it is “Modern Architecture,” that is, belonging to its own era exclusively, even starting from generalizations known as an accurate analysis of needs, the affirmation of mechanization, the exploitation of new materials, etc. which closely involve the architect. All these considerations were already evident towards the end of the 19th century, as in the case of Otto Wagner (1841–1918) who dedicated an intense essay to the theme of “modern architecture,” stating that:

All modern creations must correspond to the new materials and demands of the present if they are to suit modern man; they must illustrate our own better, democratic, self-confident, ideal nature and take into account man’s colossal technical and scientific achievements, as well as his thoroughly practical tendency—that is surely self-evident, 4

to the point of declaring that if architecture is not rooted in the life and needs of man, the risk is the loss of immediacy, of the ability to animate, of freshness, to the point of lowering itself to the level of tired reasoning, even ceasing to be art because: “The artist must always bear in mind that art’s calling is to serve man; the public does not live for the sake of art,” 5 but it must be just enough to pave the way for the architect of the future and the increasingly important role assumed within society, far from sterile stylistic diatribes since “we find ourselves in the midst of this movement. This frequent departure from the broad path of imitation and custom.” 6 At a certain point, in addition to being useless, the analogy with the past was harmful since the needs of common living and new functions to be satisfied were now in the foreground, which is why the “Modern Architect” left his or her role and instead became obsessed with the importance not of architecture but of the relationship between architecture

4 Otto Wagner, Modern Architecture. A Guidebook for His Students to This Field of Art (1895) (Santa Monica: The Getty Center for the History of Art and the Humanities, 1988), 78.

5 Ibid. 122.

6 Ibid. 79.

10
FIRST PART Architecture and modernity/Modernity: A mirage, a bundle of reflections

and other things. This is how the path of what Summerson defined “architecture tout court” emerged, where monumental architecture would gradually give way to houses, condominiums, schools, libraries, hospitals, offices, ultimately to everything that did not lend itself “in appearance modern” to that grandiose increase in scale which is the essence of monumentality. Summerson notes,

The fact is that the whole idea of formal assembly in public has withered; and with it has gone the need for an architecture reflecting that collective sentiment which goes with the love of formal assembly. Today wherever we go and whatever we do, we go and act as individuals. . . . It is in this direction that we must look for the fruitful development of modern architecture. . . . Architecture is no longer required to give a symbolic cohesion to society. Cohesion is now maintained by new methods of communication. The chief function of architecture now is to bring a sense of dignity, refinement, subtlety, gaiety, to all the places where we live and work—to bring out the values which are latent everywhere in the measured enclosure of space. A beginning has been made in the creation of such an architecture, but only a beginning. 7

So let us take a closer look at why the concept of modernity can be left as a characteristic background of both our era and Summerson’s, navigating on sight, between misunderstandings and opacity, while the architects themselves ended up dissipating its fundamental aspects that the Anglo-Saxon historian went on to outline so well. These aspects were to be resumed later when the debate among experts in the sector be came increasingly heated, fraught with doubts, torn between new theses and proposals, with the advancement of pseudo theories, and repeated about turns. This occurred to such an extent that it actually created a cloud of false problems that have marked the history of 20th-century architecture and that continue to subtly shape its destinies. Modernity, in fact, is an extremely broad and easily declinable concept, so much so that it either risked being inflated or confusing the souls of its most ardent detractors.

7 Summerson, “The Mischievous Analogy,” (1941), cit., 22–23.

11

Architecture and modernity/Modernity: A mirage, a bundle of reflections

Octavio Paz (1914–1998) argued that modernity was not a doctrine but a “tradition,” which would have allowed it to remain and change at the same time, 8 guaranteeing its own diversity:

each poetic adventure is distinct, and each poet has sown a different plant in the miraculous forest of speaking trees. Yet if the works are diverse and each route is distinct, what is it that unites all these poets? Not an aesthetic, but a search [italics mine]. My search was not fanciful, even though the idea of modernity is a mirage, a bundle of reflections. 9

Such considerations immediately led to debunking even the most wellknown classification of architecture by watertight sectors, often competing with each other, especially starting from the well-known events related to the so-called Modern Movement in architecture. The latter, at the beginning of the last century, had devised a very convincing, therefore contagious, way of designing the idea of “modernity,” up to the vertigo of the soaring skyscrapers of Ludwig Mies van der Rohe (1886–1969) whose charm has never ceased to echo on the skyline of the contemporary metropolis. 10 But it was Walter Gropius himself (1883–1969), 11 a key

8 In a philosophical sense, the term “tradition” means the act of transmitting something from person to person. Any social phenomenon that does not end in the space of a generation, is an object of tradition. In this context, what is interesting is the fact that since tradition is an act of men towards other men, it is affected by historical and cultural conditioning: therefore, a sort of dialectical tension continually occurs between the object of tradition, the ways in which it is transmitted and his interpretations.

9 Octavio Paz, “What is Modernity?,” Casabella, no. 664 (February 1999): 50. The text translated into Italian for the magazine constitutes the second part of the conference In Search of the present, which Paz held on December 8, 1990 on the occasion of the awarding of the Nobel Prize for literature.

10 The Modern Movement should be understood as a philosophy of thought that developed between the First and Second World War to respond with a new idea of the city, of architecture, and of the domestic environment to the numerous stresses of the historical period characterized by the dominant affirmation of mechanization in material production processes and from unconditional confidence in the beneficial effects of an unlimited and univocal progress of humanity. In this sense, a prolific search for results was formalized, one different from the other, regarding, in particular, the use of new materials, the speed of events, the machine in its essence as a simplifying lever, and dispenser of low cost for all. These are all topics that we will look at more closely in the course of this discussion.

11 The work of Gropius, a German architect, designer, and urban planner, can be culturally and ideologically framed in the climate of the Weimar republic (1919–1933), culminating in the founding of the Staatliches Bauhaus (1919), a unique educational experience of its kind at that historical moment, designed to redesign the figure of the architect and the influence exerted on the social, as we will see later.

12
FIRST PART

man of “modernity” in the design field, who clarified what was meant by “tradition,” stating that: “Whenever man imagined he had found “eternal beauty,” he fell back into imitation and stagnation. True tradition is the result of constant growth; its quality must be dynamic, not static, to serve as an inexhaustible stimulus to man.” 12 And as Paz him-

12 Walter Gropius, “Archaeology or Architecture for Contemporary Buildings?” (1949), in Walter Gropius, Scope of Total Architecture (1955) (New York: Collier Books, 1970), 67–68. The article was published in the New York Times Magazine (October 23, 1949) with the title “Not Gothic but Modern for our Colleges.”

13
Ludwig Mies van der Rohe and Philip Johnson, Seagram Building, New York, 1958. Photo: Jesse David Harris works.

Contemporary modernisms. Our past, our present

even the most trained minds in the culture of fast food and the smallest fashions. It is as if modernity has collapsed in itself, rotated, and then re-emerged naked in a very successful performance of past and present that coexist, “close” but “distant” (a bit like the rules imposed by the current pandemic . . .) and with the burden of contradictions that the truest modern spirit carries with it, since “to appropriate the modernities of yesterday can be at once a critique of the modernities of today and an act of faith in the modernities—and in the modern men and women— of tomorrow and the day after tomorrow.” 121

121 Berman, All That Is Solid Melts into Air. The Experience of Modernity (1982), cit., 36.

186
SECOND PART
187
188 BIBLIOGRAPHY

AA.VV.. Architettura Razionale. Milano: Franco Angeli, 1973.

AA.VV.. Bernardo Secchi, Paola Viganò, Opere recenti. Tema: porosità—isotropia [Bernardo Secchi, Paola Viganò, Recent works. Theme: Porosity—Isotropy]. Anfione Zeto, no. 25 (April 2014).

AA.VV.. “De Stijl: Manifesto I (1918).” In Programs and manifestoes on 20th-century architecture, edited by Ulrich Conrads, 39–40. Cambridge: The MIT Press, 1971.

AA.VV.. Esperienze degli anni Sessanta in America e in Europa [Experiences of the Sixties in America and Europe]. Milano: Fratelli Fabbri Editore, 1st edition 1967, New edition 1975.

AA.VV.. Five Architects. New York: Oxford University Press, 1975 (first ed. Wittenborn & Company, 1972).

AA.VV.. Fundamentals, catalog of the 14th International Architecture Exhibition. Venice: Marsilio, 2014.

AA.VV.. Gilles Deleuze, Spazi Nomadi. Figure e forme dell’etica contemporanea. Roma: DeriveApprodi, 2004.

AA.VV.. La civiltà dei superluoghi [The civilization of super-places]. Bologna: Damiani Editore, 2007.

AA.VV.. La Presenza del Passato. Prima mostra internazionale di architettura. Corderia dell’Arsenale [The Presence of the Past. First International Architecture Exhibition. Corderia dell’Arsenale], catalog. Venezia: Electa, 1980.

189
Bibliography

AA.VV.. “Le tappe del dibattito. Critiche e interrogative” [The stages of the debate. Criticisms and questions]. Casabella, no. 463–464 (November/December 1980): 106–115.

AA.VV.. Lucius Burckardt, Cedric Price, A Stroll through a fun Palace. Swiss pavilion, Biennale of Architecture 2014.

AA.VV.. PoroCity. Opening up Solidity. Rotterdam: nai010 publishers, 2018.

AA.VV.. Roma Interrotta. Rome: Officina Edizioni, 1979.

AA.VV.. The Great Utopia. The Russian and Soviet Avant-Garde, 1915–1932, exhibition catalog (Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, September 25–December 15, 1992). New York: The Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation, 1992.

AA.VV.. The Independent Group: Post-war Britain and the Aesthetics of Plenty, exhibition catalog (London, Institute of Contemporary Art, February 1–April 1, 1990). Cambridge: The MIT Press, 1990.

AA.VV.. “Three Approaches to Architecture, 1. ‘The New Brutalism’.” Architectural Forum. The Magazine of Building (May 1955): 142–153.

Aalto, Alvar. “Rationalism and Man (1935).” In Goran Schildt, Alvar Aalto in His Own Words (New York: Rizzoli, 1998), 89–93.

Aalto, Alvar. “The Humanizing of Architecture.” The Architectural Forum, no. 73 (December 1940): 505–506.

Alloway, Lawrence. The Long Front of Culture (1958), in John Russell and Suzi Gablik, Pop Art Redefined (New York: Praeger Publisher, 1969), 41–43.

Ambasz, Emilio (ed.). Italy: The New domestic Landscape. Achievement and Problems of Italian Design, exhibition catalog (New York, MoMA, May 26–September 11, 1972). Florence: Centro Di, 1972.

Argan, Giulio Carlo and Oliva, Achille Bonito. L’arte moderna 1770–1970-L’arte oltre il Duemila [Modern art 1770–1970-Art beyond the 2000s]. Firenze: Sansoni, 2002.

Arpa, Javier. “The Porous City. A Conversation between Javier Arpa and Paola Viganò.” In AA.VV., PoroCity. Opening up Solidity (Rotterdam: nai010 publishers, 2018), 53–63.

190
BIBLIOGRAPHY

Banham, Reyner. “Neoliberty. The Italian Retreat from Modern Architecture.” The Architectural Review, no. 747 (April 1959): 231–235.

Banham, Reyner. “The New Brutalism.” The Architectural Review, no. 118 (December 1955): 355–363.

Baudelaire, Charles. “The Painter of Modern Life” (1859–1860). Excerpt in Modernism: an Anthology of Sources and Documents, edited by Vassiliki Kolocotroni, Jane Goldman and Olga Taxidou, 102–108. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1998.

Baudelaire, Charles. Paris Spleen (1869). New York: New Directions, 1970.

Behrens, Peter. “Kunst und Technik.” Elektrotechnische Zeitschrift, no. 22 (1910): 552–555, now in Tecnica e cultura. Il dibattito tedesco fra Bismarck e Weimar [Technique and Culture. The German Debate between Bismarck and Weimar], edited by Tomás Maldonado, 115–131. Milan: Feltrinelli, 1991.

Benjamin, Walter. Reflections: Essays, Aphorisms, Autobiographical Writings. New York: HBJ Books, 1978.

Benjamin, Walter. The Arcades Project (1927–1940). Cambridge and London: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 1999.

Berman, Marshall. All That Is Solid Melts into Air. The Experience of Modernity (1982). London/New York: Penguin Books, 1988.

Biraghi, Marco and Damiani, Giovanni (ed.). Le parole dell’architettura. Un’antologia di testi teorici e critici: 1945–2000 [The Words of Architecture. An Anthology of Theoretical and Critical Texts: 1945–2000]. Turin: Einaudi, 2009.

Burgos, Francisco and Garrido, Gines, El Lissitzky. Wolkenbügel 1924–1925. Madrid: Editorial Rueda, 2004.

Carmagnola, Fulvio. “Quality and Esthetic Nature of Post-Industrial Technology.” Domus, no. 737 (April 1992): 28–32.

Cobe. Our Urban Living Room. Learning from Copenhagen. Stockholm: Arvinius + Orfeus Publishing, 2016.

Conrads, Ulrich (ed.). Programs and manifestoes on 20th-century architecture. Cambridge: The MIT Press, 1971.

191

Constant. “Another City for Another Life.” In Situationist International Anthology, edited by Ken Knabb, 71–73. Berkeley: Bureau of Public Secrets, 2006.

Constant. “Description of the yellow zone.” In Mark Wigley, Constant’s New Babylon. The Hyper-Architecture of Desire (Rotterdam: 010 Publishers, 1998), 122–130.

Constant. New Babylon (1974). Manuscript written by Constant, for the exhibition catalog published by the Haags Gemeentemuseum, The Hague, 1974.

Online at https://stichtingconstant.nl/system/files/1974_new_babylon.pdf (10/2021).

Curtis, William J. R. “The unique and the universal: A historian’s perspective on recent architecture.” El Croquis, no. 88/89, Mundos/Worlds (I) (1998): 4–20.

Curtis, William J. R. Modern Architecture Since 1900. Oxford: Phaidon Press, 1982.

De Micheli, Mario. Le avanguardie artistiche del Novecento [The Artistic Avant-gardes of the Twentieth Century] (1959). Milan: Feltrinelli, 2000.

Debord, Guy. “Toward a Situationist International” (1957). In Situationist International Anthology, edited by Ken Knabb, 38–43. Berkeley: Bureau of Public Secrets, 2006.

Diller, Elizabeth. “Architecture has a Danger of becoming obsolete,” interview with Liz Diller, Designboom (January 20, 2020) (https://www.designboom.com/architecture/liz-diller-interview-world-architecture-festival-2019-01-20-2020/) (10/2021).

Eisenman, Peter. “Cardboard Architecture: House II” (1969). In AA. VV., Five Architects (New York: Oxford University Press, 1975) (first ed. Wittenborn & Company, 1972), 24–37.

Eisenman, Peter. “Post-funzionalismo” [Post-functionalism] (1976). In Le parole dell’architettura. Un’antologia di testi teorici e critici: 1945–2000, [The Words of Architecture. An Anthology of Theoretical and Critical Texts: 1945–2000], edited by Marco Biraghi and Giovanni Damiani, 255–261. Turin: Einaudi, 2009.

Engel,Villads and Katrine Hedegaard (Directors).“The Windswept 8 HOUSE.” (October 6, 2011) (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YUlo_YZwvak) (10/2021).

192
BIBLIOGRAPHY

English, James. “Robin Hood Gardens: Requiem for A Dream,” video produced by The Architectural Review (November 10, 2014) (https://www.youtube.com/ watch?v=j5xEzkQDtQ8) (10/2021).

Ferrari, Federico. “Solitudine del moderno” [Solitude of the Modern]. In Charles Baudelaire, Il pittore della vita moderna [The Painter of Modern Life] (1863) (Milano: Abscondita, 2004), 71–83.

Formaggio, Dino. Separatezza e dominio [Separation and domination] (Milano, 1993). In Estetica dell’architettura [Aesthetics of Architecture], edited by Pierluigi Panza, 239–254. Milano: Guerini Studio: 1996.

Frampton, Kenneth. “America 1960–1970. Notes on urban images and theory.” Casabella, no. 359–360 (December 1971): 24–36.

Frampton, Kenneth. “Frontality versus Rotation” (1975). In AA. VV., Five Architects (New York: Oxford University Press, 1975) (first ed. Wittenborn & Company, 1972), 9–13.

Frampton, Kenneth. “Towards a Critical Regionalism: Six Points for an Architecture of Resistance.” In The Anti-Aesthetic. Essays on Postmodern Culture, edited by Hal Foster (Washington: Bay Press, 1983), 16–30.

Frampton, Kenneth. “Towards an agonistic architecture,” Domus, no. 972 (September 2013): 5–8.

Gabanizza, Velia. Il Futurismo [The Futurism]. Milan: Fabbri Editori, 1976. Gandelsonas, Mario. “Neo-funzionalismo” [Neo-functionalism] (1976). In Le parole dell’architettura. Un’antologia di testi teorici e critici: 1945–2000, [The Words of Architecture. An Anthology of Theoretical and Critical Texts: 1945–2000], edited by Marco Biraghi and Giovanni Damiani, 251–254, Turin: Einaudi, 2009.

Giedion, Sigfried. “Our Attitude Towards Problems of Aesthetics,” second part of the questionnaire submitted to the CIAM meeting in Bridgewater, 1947. In Giedion, Sigfried. A Decade of New Architecture (1951) (Nelden: Kraus Reprint, 1979), 34–40.

Giedion, Sigfried. A Decade of New Architecture (1951). Nelden: Kraus Reprint, 1979.

193

Giedion, Sigfried. Space, Time and Architecture; The Growth of a New Tradition (1941). Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1954.

Giurgola, Romaldo. “The Discreet Charm of The Bourgeoisie.” In AA. VV., “Five on Five,” The Architectural Forum, vol. 138, no. 4 (May 1973): 56–57.

Gregotti, Vittorio (ed.). Architettura e Urbanistica. Forma-spazio-habitat [Architecture and Urban Planning. Form-space-habitat]. Milan: Fratelli Fabbri Editori, 1980.

Gropius, Walter. “Appraisal of the Development of Modern Architecture (1934).” In Gropius Walter, Scope of Total Architecture (1955) (New York: Collier Books, 1970), 59–65.

Gropius, Walter. “Archaeology or Architecture for Contemporary Buildings? (1949).” In Gropius Walter, S cope of Total Architecture (1955) (New York: Collier Books, 1970), 66–70.

Gropius, Walter. “My Conception of the Bauhaus Idea.” In Gropius Walter, Scope of Total Architecture (1955) (New York: Collier Books, 1970), 19–29.

Gropius, Walter. “Principles of Bauhaus production [Dessau].” In Programs and manifestoes on 20th-century architecture, edited by Ulrich Conrads, 95–97. Cambridge: The MIT Press, 1971.

Gropius, Walter. Scope of Total Architecture (1955). New York, Collier Books, 1970.

Harvey, David. The Condition of Postmodernity. An Enquiry into the origins of Cultural Change (1989). Cambridge: Blackwell Publisher, 1990.

Hitchcock, Henry Russell. “The architecture of bureaucracy & the architecture of genius.” The Architectural Review, no. 101 (January 1947): 3–6.

Irace, Fulvio (ed.). Assenza/Presenza. Un’ipotesi di lettura per l’architettura, exhibition catalog (Bologna, Galleria comunale d’arte Moderna, December 10, 1977–January 23, 1978). Napoli: D’Auria Editrice/Piano Inclinato, 1977.

Ito, Toyo. “Tarzans in the Media Forest.” 2G, n. 97 (1997): 121–142.

Jameson, Frederic. Postmodernism: Or, the Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism (Poetics of Social Forms) (1984). New York: Verso Books, 1992.

194
BIBLIOGRAPHY

Jencks, Charles and FAT (ed.). “Radical Post-Modernism.” AD—Architectural Design, no. 81 (May 2011).

Jencks, Charles. Modern Movements in Architecture (1973). Harmondsworth: Penguin Books, 1985.

Jencks, Charles. The Language of Post-Modern Architecture (1977). New York: Rizzoli International Publications, 1991.

Johnson, Philip, and Hitchcock Henry Russell. The International Style-Architecture since 1922. New York: WW Norton & Co, 1932.

Johnson, Philip and Hitchcock Henry-Russell (ed.). Modern architecture: international exhibition (New York, MoMA, February 10–March 23, 1932), exhibition catalog.

Johnson, Philip and Mark Wigley, Deconstructivist Architecture, exhibition catalog (MoMA, June 23–August 30, 1988). New York: MoMA, 1988.

Johnson, Philip. “Philip Johnson: moderno o post?” [Philip Johnson: Modern or Post?], interview by Marco Mattei. Casabella, no. 468 (April 1981): 48–50.

Johnson, Philip. “Reflections: On Style and the International Style; On Post-Modernism; On Architecture.” Oppositions, no. 10 (Autumn 1977): 17–19, extract published in AA. VV. “Le tappe del dibattito. Critiche e interrogative” [The Stages of the Debate. Criticisms and Questions]. Casabella, no. 463–464 (November/December 1980): 110.

Johnson, Philip. “The Seven Crutches of Modern Architecture.” Perspecta, no. 3 (1955): 40–45.

Knabb, Ken (ed.). Situationist International Anthology. Berkeley: Bureau of Public Secrets, 2006.

Goldman, Jane, Kolocotroni, Vassiliki, and Taxidou, Olga (ed). Modernism: an Anthology of Sources and Documents. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1998.

Koolhaas, Rem. “Junk space.” Domus, no. 833 (January 2001): 36–39.

Koolhaas, Rem. “La Ville Radieuse.” In Sulle tracce di Le Corbusier [In the footsteps of Le Corbusier], edited by Carlo Palazzolo and Riccardo Vio, 164–175. Verona: Arsenale, 1989.

195

Koolhaas, Rem. “R. Koolhaas on C. Price.” in AA. VV. Lucius Burckardt, Cedric Price, A Stroll through a fun Palace. Swiss pavilion, Biennale of Architecture 2014, 14.

Koolhaas, Rem. Delirious New York. A Retroactive Manifesto for Manhattan. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1978.

Koolhaas, Rem. Harvard Design School. Guide to Shopping. Köln: Taschen, 2001.

Koolhaas, Rem/OMA. “Study for a Skyscraper.” Domus, no. 800 (January 1998): 48–51.

Le Corbusier. The Athens Charter. New York: Grossman Publishers, 1973.

Le Corbusier. The City of Tomorrow and its Planning (1925). London: Architectural Press, 1971.

Le Corbusier. Toward a New Architecture (1923). New York: Dover Publications, 1986.

Da Vinci, Leonardo. Codex Atlanticus, 1478–1518, Milano: Biblioteca Ambrosiana.

Lévy, Pierre. L’intelligenza collettiva. Per un’antropologia del cyberspazio [Collective Intelligence: Mankind’s Emerging World in Cyberspace]. Milano: Feltrinelli, 1996.

Ligtelijn, Vincent and Strauven, Francis (ed.). Aldo Van Eyck Writings. Collected Articles and Other Writings 1947–1998. Amsterdam: Sun Publishers, 2008.

Lissitzky, El. “Il Proun” [The Proun] (1920–1921). In Vieri Quilici, L’architettura del costruttivismo [The Architecture of Constructivism] (Rome-Bari: Laterza, 1978), 94–112.

Lissitzky, El. “The Club as a Social Force.” In El Lissitzky, Russia: An Architecture for World Revolution (1930) (Cambridge: The MIT Press, 1970), 43–45.

Lissitzky, El. Russia: An Architecture for World Revolution (1930). Cambridge: The MIT Press, 1970.

Lissitzky, El. “Old Cities, New Buildings” (1929). In Francisco Burgos and Ginés Garrido, El Lissitzky. Wolkenbügel 1924–1925 (Madrid: Editorial Rueda, 2004), 91–94.

196
BIBLIOGRAPHY

Lissitzky, El. “SSSR’s Architektur,” Das Kunstblatt, no. 2 (Febraury 1925): 49–52. Now in Architettura e Urbanistica. Forma-Spazio-Habitat [Architecture and Urban Planning. Form-Space-Habitat], edited by Gregotti, 273–275. Milano, Fratelli Fabbri Editori, 1980.

Loos, Adolf. “Ornament and Crime (1908).” In Programs and manifestoes on 20th-century architecture, edited by Ulrich Conrads, 19–24. Cambridge: The MIT Press, 1971.

Lyotard, Jean-François. “Intervento italiano.” Alfabeta, no. 32 (January 1982): p. 10.

Lyotard, Jean-François. The Postmodern Condition: A Report on Knowledge (1979). Manchester: University Press, 1984.

Mairs, Jessica. “BIG’s 8 House succeeds where the Smithsons’ ‘streets in the sky’ failed.” Dezeen (3 February 2016) (https://www.dezeen.com/2016/02/03/ big-8-house-robin-hood-gardens-smithsons-streets-in-the-sky-failed-saysbjarke-ingels/) (10/2021).

Mairs, Jessica. “Haworth Tompkins appointed to work on Robin Hood Gardens redevelopment.” Dezeen (February 8, 2016) (https://www.dezeen. com/2016/02/08/haworth-tomkins-robin-hood-gardens-estate-redevelopment-brutalism-east-london-alison-peter-smithson/) (10/2021).

Mayakovsky, Vladimir. Opere [Works]. Roma: Editori Riuniti, vol. II, 1958.

Maldonado, Tomás (ed.). Tecnica e cultura. Il dibattito tedesco fra Bismarck e Weimar [Technique and Culture. The German Debate between Bismarck and Weimar]. Milan: Feltrinelli, 1991.

McHale, John. “Gropius and the Bauhaus” (excerpt). Art (London) (March 3, 1955), now in AA. VV., The Independent Group: Post-war Britain and the Aesthetics of Plenty, exhibition catalog (London, Institute of Contemporary Art, February 1–April 1, 1990) (Cambridge: The MIT Press, 1990), 182.

McHale, John. “The Plastic Parthenon.” Dotzero Magazine (Spring 1967), now in John Russell and Suzi Gablik, Pop Art Redefined (New York: Praeger Publisher, 1969), 47–53.

McHale, John. R. Buckminster Fuller. London: Prentice-Hall International, 1962.

McLuhan, Marshall. Understanding Media: The Extensions of Man (1964). Cambridge, The MIT Press, 1994.

197

Mello, Patrizia. “Forme di ‘eccesso’ e perdita di senso generalizzata” [Forms of ‘excess’ and generalized loss of meaning]. In AA.VV., La civiltà dei superluoghi [The civilization of super-places] (Bologna: Damiani Editore, 2007), 15–19.

Mello, Patrizia. “Progetto e computer” [Project and Computer]. In AA.VV., Gilles Deleuze, Spazi Nomadi. Figure e forme dell’etica contemporanea (Roma: DeriveApprodi, 2004), 115–137.

Mello, Patrizia. Ito Digitale. Nuovi media, nuovo reale [Digital Ito. New Media, New Real]. Roma: Edilstampa, 2008.

Mello, Patrizia. Metamorfosi dello spazio. Annotazioni sul divenire metropolitano [Metamorphosis of Space. Notes on Metropolitan Becoming]. Torino: Bollati Boringhieri, 2002.

Mello, Patrizia. Neovanguardie e controcultura a Firenze. Il movimenrto Radical e i protagonisti di un cambiamento storico internazionale [Neo-avant-gardes and Counterculture in Florence. The Radical Movement and the Protagonists of an International Historical Change]. Firenze: Angelo Pontecorboli, 2017.

Mies van der Rohe, Ludwig. “Architecture and Technology (1950).” In Neumeyer Fritz, The Artless Word. Mies van der Rohe on the Building Art (Cambridge: The MIT Press, 1991), 324.

Mies van der Rohe, Ludwig. “Building Art and the Will of the Epoch! (1924).” In Neumeyer Fritz. The Artless Word. Mies van der Rohe on the Building Art (Cambridge: The MIT Press, 1991), 245–247.

Migayrou, Frederic. La Tendenza: architectures italiennes 1965–1985. Exhibition catalog (Center Georges Pompidou, June 19–September 10, 2012). Paris: Édition du Center Georges Pompidou, 2012.

Higueras, Ester.,Moneo, Belén, and Elisa Pozo, “Ahora que hemos conocido Madrid sin contaminación: el manifiesto de tres arquitectas para una ciudad ‘postcovid.’” El País (April 23, 2020) (https://elpais.com/elpais/2020/04/21/ icon_design/1587498287_556833.html) (10/2021).

Moses, Robert. “What happened to Haussmann.” Architectural Forum, no. 77 (July 1942): 57–66.

Neumeyer, Fritz. The Artless Word. Mies van der Rohe on the Building Art. Cambridge: The MIT Press, 1991.

198
BIBLIOGRAPHY

Nietzsche, Friedrich Wilhelm. Beyond Good and Evil: Prelude to a Philosophy of the Future (1886). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002.

Nolan, Hamilton. “New York’s Hudson Yards is an ultra-capitalist Forbidden City.” The Guardian (March 13, 2019) (https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2019/mar/13/new-york-hudson-yards-ultra-capitalist) (10/2021).

Nouvel, Jean. “On Designing.” Domus, no. 742 (October 1992): 25–28.

OMA./Koolhaas, Rem and Mau, Bruce. S,M,L,XL. New York: The Monacelli Press, 1995.

Oud, Jacobus. “De Stijl”—cat. n. 81, Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam, 1951. In Architettura e Urbanistica. Forma-spazio-habitat [Architecture and Urban Planning. Form-space-habitat], edited by Gregotti Vittorio, 276–278. Milan: Fratelli Fabbri Editori, 1980.

Paci, Enzo. “Relazioni e significati” [Relations and meanings] (Milano 1966), in Estetica dell’architettura [Aesthetics of Architecture], edited by Pierluigi Panza (Milano: Guerini Studio, 1996), 223–238.

Palazzolo, Carlo and Vio, Riccardo (ed.). Sulle tracce di Le Corbusier [In the footsteps of Le Corbusier]. Verona: Arsenale, 1989.

Panza, Pierluigi (ed.). Estetica dell’architettura [Aesthetics of Architecture]. Milano: Guerini Studio, 1996.

Paz, Octavio. “What is Modernity?.” Casabella, no. 664 (February 1999): 50–51.

Paz, Octavio. Alternating Current (1967). New York: Arcade Publishing, 1990.

Paz, Octavio. In/mediaciones. Barcelona: Editorial Seix Barral, 1979.

Pehnt, Wolfgang. “Die Postmoderne als Luna Park.” Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, n. 18 (August 1980), extract published in AA. VV. Le tappe del dibattito. Critiche e interrogativi [The stages of the debate. Criticisms and questions]. Casabella, no. 463–464 (November/December 1980): 114.

Pengelly, Martin. “Trump wants to ‘Make Federal Buildings Beautiful Again’ with neoclassical order.” The Guardian (February 4, 2020) (https://www. theguardian.com/us-news/2020/feb/04/trump-federal-buildings-beautiful-classical-order).

199

Portoghesi, Paolo. La fine del proibizionismo [The end of Prohibition]. In A.A. V.V., La Presenza del Passato. Prima mostra internazionale di architettura. Corderia dell’Arsenale [The Presence of the Past. First International Architecture Exhibition. Corderia dell’Arsenale], catalog (Venezia: Electa, 1980), 10–12.

Price, Cedric. “Interview with Cedric Price on the London Inter-Action Centre project.” Domus, no. 581 (April 1978): 17–21.

Quilici, Vieri. L’architettura del costruttivismo [The Architecture of Constructivism]. Rome-Bari: Laterza, 1978.

Rakitin, Vasilii. “The Artisan and the Prophet: Marginal Notes on Two Artistic Careers.” In AA.VV. The Great Utopia. The Russian and Soviet Avant-Garde, 1915–1932, exhibition catalog (Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, September 25–December 15, 1992) (New York: The Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation, 1992), 25–37.

Rathenau, Walter. “Die Mechanisierung der Welt.” In Walter Rathenau. Zur Kritik der Zeit (Berlin: S. Fischer Verlag, 1912), 45–95, now in Tecnica e cultura. Il dibattito tedesco fra Bismarck e Weimar [Technique and Culture. The German Debate between Bismarck and Weimar], edited by Tomás Maldonado, 171–201. Milan: Feltrinelli, 1991.

Rauschenberg, Robert. “Interview with André Parinaud,” Arts, no. 821 (Paris, May 1961), in AA. VV., Esperienze degli anni Sessanta in America e in Europa [Experiences of the Sixties in America and Europe] (Milano: Fratelli Fabbri Editore, 1st edition 1967, New edition 1975), 272–274.

Rogers, Ernesto Nathan. “I CIAM al Museo” (1959). In Rogers, Ernesto Nathan. Editoriali di architettura [Editorials of architecture] (Rovereto: Zandonai Editore, 2009), 81–85.

Rogers, Ernesto Nathan. “The Evolution of Architecture. An Answer to the Caretaker of Frigidaires,” Casabella Continuità, no. 228 (June 1959): V–VI.

Rogers, Ernesto Nathan. Editoriali di architettura [Editorials of architecture]. Rovereto: Zandonai Editore, 2009.

Rossi, Aldo. “L’architettura della ragione come architettura di tendenza” (1969). In Aldo Rossi, Scritti scelti sull’architettura e la città 1956–1972 (Macerata: Quodlibet, 2012), 345–352.

200
BIBLIOGRAPHY

Rossi, Aldo. Aldo Rossi, il Teatro del Mondo, 1979–2004 (documentary, 47’) by Francesco Saverio Fera (scenographer) and Dario Zanasi (director) (https:// vimeo.com/132710579). (10/2021).

Rossi, Aldo. Scritti scelti sull’architettura e la città 1956–1972. Macerata: Quodlibet, 2012.

Rossi, Aldo. The Architecture of the City (1966). Cambridge: The MIT Press, 1984.

Russell, John and Gablik, Suzi. Pop Art Redefined. New York: Praeger Publisher, 1969.

Sant’Elia, Antonio. “Futurist Architecture (July 11, 1914).” In Programs and manifestoes on 20th-century architecture, edited by Ulrich Conrads, 34–37. Cambridge: The MIT Press, 1971.

Schildt, Goran. Alvar Aalto in His Own Words. New York: Rizzoli, 1998.

Scott Brown, Denis. “Learning from pop.” Casabella, no. 359–360 (December 1971): 14–21.

S cott Brown, Denis. “Reply to Frampton.” Casabella, no. 359–360 (December 1971): 39–46.

Secchi, Bernardo and Viganò, Paola. “La metropoli orizzontale, una visione per Bruxelles.” In AA.VV., Bernardo Secchi, Paola Viganò, Opere recenti. Tema: porosità—isotropia [Bernardo Secchi, Paola Viganò, Recent works. Theme: Porosity—Isotropy]. Anfione Zeto, no. 25 (April 2014): 31–48.

Simmel, Georg. “Germanic and Classical Romanic Style” (1918). Theory, Culture & Society, Vol. 24 (7–8) (2007): 47–52.

SITE/Wines, James. “Green Architecture.” Terrazzo, no. 7 (Spring 1992): 49–77.

Smithson, Alison and Smithson, Peter. “But Today We Collect Ads.” Ark, no. 18 (November 1956), now in AA. VV. The Independent Group: Post-war Britain and the Aesthetics of Plenty, exhibition catalog (London, Institute of Contemporary Art, February 1–April 1, 1990) (Cambridge: The MIT Press, 1990), 185–186.

Smithson, Alison and Smithson, Peter. “The New Brutalism” (April 1957). In

201

AA. VV., The Independent Group: Post-war Britain and the Aesthetics of Plenty, exhibition catalog (London, Institute of Contemporary Art, February 1–April 1, 1990) (Cambridge: The MIT Press, 1990), 186.

Smithson, Alison. Team 10 Primer. Cambridge: The MIT Press, 1968.

Sottsass, Ettore. “Il popolo lontano” [The Distant People] (1975). In Storie e progetti di un designer italiano. Quattro lezioni di Ettore Sottsass Jr. [Stories and Projects of an Italian designer. Four lectures by Ettore Sottsass Jr.], edited by Antonio Martorana, 99–109. Florence: Alinea, 1983.

Stam, Mart. “El Lissitzky’s Architectural Concept” (1966). In Francisco Burgos and Ginés Garrido, El Lissitzky. Wolkenbügel 1924–1925 (Madrid: Editorial Rueda, 2004), 75–80.

Sullivan, Louis. “Kindergarten Charts—XIV. Growth and Decay (1902).” In Sullivan, Louis. Kindergarten Charts Revised 1918 And Other Writings (New York: George Wittenborn Inc., 1947), 48–55.

Sullivan, Louis. “Ornament in Architecture (1892).” In Sullivan Louis, Kindergarten Charts Revised 1918 And Other Writings (New York: George Wittenborn Inc., 1947), 187–190.

Sullivan, Louis. “The Tall Office Building Artistically Considered (1896).” In Sullivan Louis, Kindergarten Charts Revised 1918 And Other Writings (New York: George Wittenborn Inc., 1947), 202–213.

Sullivan, Louis. Kindergarten Charts Revised 1918 And Other Writings. New York: George Wittenborn Inc., 1947.

Summerson, John. “The Case for a Theory of ‘Modern’ Architecture” (1957), in John Summerson, The Unromantic Castle (London: Thames and Hudson, 1990), 257–266.

Summerson, John. “The Mischievous Analogy (1941).” Domus, no. 702, (February 1989): 17–28.

Summerson, John. The Unromantic Castle. London: Thames and Hudson, 1990. Tafuri, Manfredo. “L’architecture dans le boudoir” (1980). In Le parole dell’architettura. Un’antologia di testi teorici e critici: 1945–2000 [The Words of Architecture. An Anthology of Theoretical and Critical Texts: 1945–2000], edited by Marco Biraghi and Giovanni Damiani, 277–316. Turin: Einaudi, 2009.

202
BIBLIOGRAPHY

Tafuri, Manfredo. “Toward a Critique of Architectural Ideology” (1969). In Architecture Theory since 1968, edited by Kenneth Michael Hays, 6–35. Cambridge: The MIT Press, 1998.

Tafuri, Manfredo. Five Architects N.Y.. Rome: Officina Edizioni, 1981.

Van Eyck, Aldo. “Steps towards a Configurative Discipline (1962).” In Aldo Van Eyck Writings. Collected Articles and Other Writings 1947–1998, edited by Vincent Ligtelijn and Francis Strauven, 327–343. Amsterdam: Sun Publishers, 2008.

Van Eyck, Aldo. “Ten opinions on the type.” Casabella, no. 509–510 (January–February 1985): 112.

Venturi, Robert. “Learning from Aalto.” Casabella no. 658 (July–August 1998): 3.

Venturi, Robert. Complexity and Contradiction in Architecture (1966). New York: MoMA, 1966.

Venturi, Robert, Scott Brown, Denise, and Izenour, Steven. Learning From Las Vegas: The Forgotten Symbolism of Architectural Form (1972). Cambridge: The MIT Press, 1977.

Wagner, Otto. Modern Architecture. A Guidebook for His Students to This Field of Art (1895). Santa Monica: The Getty Center for the History of Art and the Humanities, 1988.

Wigley, Mark. “Anti-buildings and Anti-architects.” Domus, no. 866 (January 2004): 16–23.

Wigley, Mark. “Deconstructivist Architecture.” In Philip Johnson and Mark Wigley, Deconstructivist Architecture, exhibition catalog (MoMA, June 23–August 30, 1988) (New York: MoMA, 1988), 10–20.

Wigley, Mark. Constant’s New Babylon. The Hyper-Architecture of Desire. Rotterdam: 010 Publishers, 1998.

Wines, James. De-Architecture. New York: Rizzoli International Publications, 1987.

Wines, James. Green architecture. The art of architecture in the age of ecology. New York: Taschen, 1999.

203

Wood, Paul. The Politics of the Avant-Garde. In AA.VV., The Great Utopia. The Russian and Soviet Avant-Garde, 1915–1932, exhibition catalog (Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, September 25–December 15, 1992) (New York: The Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation, 1992), 1–24.

Wright, Frank Lloyd. “In the Cause of architecture (1908).” In Wright, Frank Lloyd. In the Cause of Architecture: Essays by Frank Lloyd Wright for Architectural Record, 1908–1952 (New York: Architectural Records Books, 1975), 53–119.

Wright, Frank Lloyd. Architettura organica. L’architettura della democrazia [Organic Architecture. The Architecture of Democracy] (1939). Milano: Muggiani Tipografo Editore, 1945.

Wright, Frank Lloyd. In the Cause of Architecture: Essays by Frank Lloyd Wright for Architectural Record, 1908–1952. New York: Architectural Records Book[s], 1975.

Wright, Frank Lloyd. Io e l’architettura [Me and architecture] (1955). Extract published in Architecture and Urban Planning. Forma-Spazio-Habitat, edited by Vittorio Gregotti, 298–300. Milan: Fratelli Fabbri Editori, 1980.

Zaera, Alejandro. “Incorporating: interview with J. Nouvel.” El croquis, no. 65–66 (1994): 9–41.

Zevi, Bruno. “Concerning Architectural Culture,” Metron, no. 31–32 (May/ June 1949): 5–30.

Zevi, Bruno. “Mies: là dove il razionale si logora nel classicismo” [Mies: Where the Rational wears out in Classicism]. L’architettura. Cronache e Storia, no. 37 (November 1958): 439.

Zevi, Bruno. “Per un’architettura organica in Italia [For an Organic Architecture in Italy].” Mercurio. Mensile di politica arte scienze, Anno II/no. 13 (September, 1945): 152–156.

Zevi, Bruno. Toward an Organic Architecture. London: Faber & Faber, 1950.

204
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.