This publication presents a selection of ground-breaking contributions, grouped thematically in a new way, which originally appeared in the journal archithese, accompanied by critical essays by contemporary authors. Located in its specific context - the heterogeneous and turbulent landscape of debates in the years after 1968 - archithese did not only give local protagonists a voice, but it also established a transatlantic dialogue amongst architects, critics and spatial scientists. Among them were influential figures such as Rem Koolhaas, Aldo Rossi, the architecture collective Superstudio, Alan Colqhoun, Charles Jencks, Denise Scott Brown, Manfredo Tafuri and even Henri Lefébvre.
The positions gathered here are exemplary for the pluralist approach and thematic openness characteristic for the way in which the art historian Stanislaus von Moos compiled the journal in its founding phase. The thematic spectrum ranges from historicism, realism concepts in architecture, urbanism, user-oriented approaches to interest in informal and spontaneous building. Arranged in five thematic chapters, the articles illustrate, in different ways, the examination of the incipient postmodernism and, due to their richness of facets, point far beyond a pure concept of style.
With contributions by: Irina Davidovici, Samia Henni, Torsten Lange, Gabrielle Schaad, Marie-Theres Stauffer, Stanislaus von Moos.
Text in English, faksimile pages Geman, English, French.
Gabrielle Schaad is a Postdoc at the Chair of the History and Theory of Architecture, Art, and Design, TU Munich and studied art history in Zurich, Paris and Tokyo. She is the author of numerous catalogue contributions and essays on art and design work since the 1960s, at the interface of architecture and urbanism in a transcultural context. Her research interests include the spatialization of power and gender relations. Torsten Lange is a visiting lecturer for Theory of Architecture at the ETH Zurich and a guest professor at the TU Munich. He studied architecture and also history and theory of architecture at the Bauhaus University Weimar and the Bartlett School of Architecture / UCL, London. His research focuses on architecture and urban planning in the socialist states of post-war Europe and also on the development of transdisciplinary perspectives in architectural research.
This publication presents a selection of ground-breaking contributions, grouped thematically in a new way, which originally appeared in the journal archithese, accompanied by critical essays by contemporary authors. Located in its specific context - the heterogeneous and turbulent landscape of debates in the years after 1968 - archithese did not only give local protagonists a voice, but it also established a transatlantic dialogue amongst architects, critics and spatial scientists. Among them were influential figures such as Rem Koolhaas, Aldo Rossi, the architecture collective Superstudio, Alan Colqhoun, Charles Jencks, Denise Scott Brown, Manfredo Tafuri and even Henri Lefébvre.
The positions gathered here are exemplary for the pluralist approach and thematic openness characteristic for the way in which the art historian Stanislaus von Moos compiled the journal in its founding phase. The thematic spectrum ranges from historicism, realism concepts in architecture, urbanism, user-oriented approaches to interest in informal and spontaneous building. Arranged in five thematic chapters, the articles illustrate, in different ways, the examination of the incipient postmodernism and, due to their richness of facets, point far beyond a pure concept of style.
With contributions by: Irina Davidovici, Samia Henni, Torsten Lange, Gabrielle Schaad, Marie-Theres Stauffer, Stanislaus von Moos.
Text in English, faksimile pages Geman, English, French.
Gabrielle Schaad is a Postdoc at the Chair of the History and Theory of Architecture, Art, and Design, TU Munich and studied art history in Zurich, Paris and Tokyo. She is the author of numerous catalogue contributions and essays on art and design work since the 1960s, at the interface of architecture and urbanism in a transcultural context. Her research interests include the spatialization of power and gender relations. Torsten Lange is a visiting lecturer for Theory of Architecture at the ETH Zurich and a guest professor at the TU Munich. He studied architecture and also history and theory of architecture at the Bauhaus University Weimar and the Bartlett School of Architecture / UCL, London. His research focuses on architecture and urban planning in the socialist states of post-war Europe and also on the development of transdisciplinary perspectives in architectural research.