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Robert Venturi Goes for Messy Vitality
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17487 |
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Section : |
THE ARTS
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| Issue
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7 / 1990 |
2,105 Words |
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Shira Rosan Shira Rosan is a practicing architect and architectural writer
currently living in New York. |
Architecture has gone through vast changes in the past quarter century, and the direction it will take as we inch up to the new millennium is not clear. Post-modernism and Deconstructivism are the most recent movements to have captured the public's attention, the latter supplanting the former as architecture's avant-grade with surprising suddenness in the mid-1980s.
Although many factors are responsible for the current turmoil in architecture, one firm - Venturi, Scott Brown and Associates - was seminal, more than two decades ago, in creating the intellectual atmosphere and supplying the theoretical underpinning for what became these new movements. The start of the 1990s seemed like a good time to revisit Venturi, Scott Brown, to gage their reaction to the architecture of the recent pas and find out what they themselves are thinking and planning as the century ends.
Peak of influence
Twenty-five years ago, the style of architecture we have come to think of as Modern had reached its peak of influence and acceptance. To its founders in the early years of the century, of course, it was not a style: not Modern Architecture but modern architecture, the inevitable result of modern thought married to a true understanding of the real, technology-based world. It was rooted in the belief that technology was a force for good, an invention of humanity that could be counted on to lift humankind above the morass of problems we have wallowed in for as long as we have stood upright. Technology was progress, progress was good, and art (as well as architecture) based - as technology was - in rationality, minimalism, and simplicity would therefore be
... (1999 of 12549 Characters)
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