Architectures: Modernism and After surveys the history of the building from the advent of industrialization to the cultural imperatives of the present moment.
* Brings together international art and architectural historians to consider a range of topics that have influenced the shape, profile, and aesthetics of the built environment.
* Presents crucial ‘moments’ in the history of the field when the architecture of the past is made to respond to new and changing cultural circumstances.
* Provides a view of architectural history as a part of a continuing dialogue between aesthetic criteria and social and cultural imperatives.
* Part of the New Interventions in Art History Series, which is published in conjunction with the Association of Art Historians.
Tabela de Conteúdo
List of Illustrations.
Notes on Contributors.
Series Editor’s Preface.
Preface.
Introduction: Architectures in the Plural: Andrew
Ballantyne.
1. An Avant-garde Academy: Simon Sadler (University of
California, Davis).
2. Aalto and the Tutelary Goddesses: Sarah Menin (University of
Newcastle).
3. Becoming-skyscraper: Ayn Rand’s Architect: Gerard
Loughlin (University of Newcastle).
4. Steps Towards a Sustainable Architecture: Brenda and Robert
Vale (University of Auckland, New Zealand).
5. Gordon Matta-Clark’s Building Dissections: Stephen
Walker (University of Sheffield).
6. Territoriality and Identity at RAF Menwith Hill: David Wood
(University of Newcastle).
7. Domestic Space Transformed, 1850-2000: Elizabeth Cromley
(Northeastern University).
8. English Townscape as Cultural and Symbolic Capital: Andrew
Law (University of Newcastle).
Bibliography.
Index
Sobre o autor
Andrew Ballantyne is Professor of Architecture at the University of Newcastle upon Tyne. He is the author of Architecture, Landscape and Liberty: Richard Payne Knight and the Picturesque (1997), What is Architecture? (2002), and Architecture: A Very Short Introduction (2002).