Post modernism

Page 1

Compiled by : FD Architects Forum Gr. Floor , Ashoka apartment Bhawani Singh Road C-scheme , Jaipur -302001 Rajasthan ( INDIA) Ph. 91-0141-2743536 Email: architect@frontdesk.co.in Web : http://www.frontdesk.co.in/forum/

POST-MODERNISM


Post-modernism Architecture Leading Architects In Post-modernism Are :

Charles Moore Robert Venturi Philippe Johnson Hans Hollein James Stirling

http://www.frontdesk.co.in/forum/


POST-MODERNISM ARCHITECTURE •Modernist architecture –when the cube was king-didn‘t age well. As time passed, grime streaked flat, concrete walls, like wrinkles carved into a smooth face. Glass-paned skyscrapers lost their shine. Stripped of ornament, abstract forms that once seemed ultramodern appeared just plain blank by the 1970s. In scaling up from the margins to the mainstream, Modernism went awry. •What shook up the architectural world and broke the stranglehold of slick, geometric forms was a book by Robert Venturi, Complexity and Contradiction (1966). ―Architecture

is evolutionary as well as

revolutionary.

http://www.frontdesk.co.in/forum/


POST-MODERNISM ARCHITECTURE •During the 1970s and ‘80s, buildings termed Postmodern were decorated not only with color –but with a Classical elements like slightly out-of-whack columns. Architects liberally tacked on miscellaneous borrowings from all periods of history. Sleek

was gone―Anything goes was

booming. •By the 1990s, picturesque Po-Mo had been so overdone, plastered on every suburban strip mall facade, it was declared passé. The next thing was Deconstructivism, a cerebral style of spiky angles and fractured forms. Decon practitioners claimed the style reflected cultural chaos at the end of the millennium. •Since 1960s, the mainstream has split into multiple branches. Diversity reigns, with a push for sustainable (environment-friendly) design gaining ground. http://www.frontdesk.co.in/forum/


Charles Moore : Moore And More For Charles Moore (1925-1993), an archetypal Post-Modernist who heaped on multiple allusions, more was never enough. An outspoken opponent of anonymous bedroom suburbs and interchangeable cities, Moore wanted architecture to recapture a lost ―sense of place. each commission was an opportunity to highlight what the ancients called ―genius loci,

Sea Ranch housing (1965-72)

or special attributes of a site. Moore‘s Sea Ranch housing (1965-72) on the California coast was an extreme example of ecological architecture. The houses modeled on local barns, are nestled into the site, sheltered from the prevailing wings. Slanted woods both deflect wind and collect sun

http://www.frontdesk.co.in/forum/


Charles Moore : Piazza d’Italia

Piazza d’Italia (1975-1978) ,New Orleans, By Charles Moore.

Moore stressed the need for “joy” in architecture. A MIX of historical forms, in his relation to high and low culture.

http://www.frontdesk.co.in/forum/


Charles Moore : Piazza d’Italia (1975-1978) ,New Orleans

Moore refer indirectly to historical motifs only to put-on them. His capitals consist of water jets shaping Corinthian ―leaves.

Stainless-steel Ionic volutes and streams of water flowing down columns to suggest fluting are a naughty takeoff on Classical style. In a high-camp parody, medallions shaped like Moore‘s head spout water. http://www.frontdesk.co.in/forum/


Michael Graves Michael Graves (b.1934), who originally wished to be a painter, color-codes his building to create what he calls ―metaphorical

landscapes.

His shades are derived from nature, such as blue as an analogy for sky, green and earth tones for landscape. It is as if he is carving his own mount, at the same time adorned with his personal interpretation of Classical motifs.

He wants his architecture to be capable of being read by anybody. http://www.frontdesk.co.in/forum/


Michael Graves

Portland Building, at Portland, Oregon, 1982

http://www.frontdesk.co.in/forum/


Michael Graves

Portland Building, at Portland, Oregon, 1982

http://www.frontdesk.co.in/forum/


Michael Graves

Humana Building, Louisville, Kentucky, located at 500 West Main Street . 1985

Each side of the building has slightly different designs. The form of the upper few floors are designed as a sloping pyramid. The building is famous because of the flat pink granite that covered the exterior façade. The loggia on the building‘s north facade is respectful to the older downtown architecture, and in a way continues the store front line of the original street fabric.

http://www.frontdesk.co.in/forum/


Robert Venturi & Dennis Scott Brown Robert Venturi might be considered as one of the fathers of Postmodern architecture. He is also known for coining the maxim "Less is a bore" as antidote to Mies van der Rohe's famous modernist dictum "Less is more". Together with his wife, Dennis Scoot Brown, Venturis are running an architectural office and their designs forced the American architects and planners to reconsider the Modernist sway of architectural practice, and to perform a more humanist architecture that belongs to American traditions. http://www.frontdesk.co.in/forum/


Robert Venturi Guild House –The Symbolism Of The Ordinary:

The pretensions of the giant order on the front, the symmetrical, palazzo-like composition with its three monumental stories (as well as its six real stories), it is this juxtaposition of contrasting symbols—the decoration (appliqué ) of one order of symbols on another—that constitutes for us the decorated shed. This is what makes Guild House an architect’s decorated shed. http://www.frontdesk.co.in/forum/


Robert Venturi Vanna Venturi House, Philadelphia, PA, 1964

Venturi designs this building for his mother. The design of the building embodies several “complexities and contradictions�: it is both complex and simple, open and closed, big and little; some of its elements are good on one level and bad on another; its order accommodates the generic elements of the house in general, and the circumstantial elements of a house in particular. It achieves the difficult unity of a medium number of diverse parts rather than the easy unity of few or many motival parts. http://www.frontdesk.co.in/forum/


ROBERT VENTURI Vanna Venturi House, Philadelphia, PA, 1964 The contradiction between inside and outside, however, is not total: inside, the plan as a whole reflects the symmetrical consistency of the outside; outside, the perforations in the elevations reflect the circumstantial distortions within. Concerning the inside, the plan is originally symmetrical with a central vertical core from which radiate two almost symmetrical diagonal walls that separate two end spaces in front from a major central space in back. This almost Palladian rigidity and symmetry is distorted, however, to accommodate to the particular needs of the spaces: the kitchen on the right, for instance, varies from the bedroom on the left. http://www.frontdesk.co.in/forum/


ROBERT VENTURI Vanna Venturi House, Philadelphia, PA, 1964

http://www.frontdesk.co.in/forum/


ROBERT VENTURI Vanna Venturi House, Philadelphia, PA, 1964

http://www.frontdesk.co.in/forum/


Philip Johnson

American architect, critic and collector. He enrolled as an undergraduate at Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, in 1923.

http://www.frontdesk.co.in/forum/


PHILIP JOHNSON Glass House or Johnson house, in New Canaan, Connecticut, built in 1949

Derived from Mies van der Rohe‘s Farnsworth House (1946–51) at Plano, IL, but more classical in plan, the Glass House attests to Johnson‘s naturally critical turn of mind and his preoccupation with history.

http://www.frontdesk.co.in/forum/


PHILIP JOHNSON Sony Building (originally AT&T Building) in New York City, 1984. Johnson is best known for his Post-Modern structures, like AT&T (now Sony) building. This granite clad skyscraper sounded the death knell for minimalist glass boxes. With its Classical loggia at the base and Chippendale top, it certified the marketibility of PostModernism. It borrows elements and references from the past and reintroduces symbolism to architecture.

http://www.frontdesk.co.in/forum/


PHILIP JOHNSON Sony Building (originally AT&T Building) in New York City, 1984.

http://www.frontdesk.co.in/forum/


JAMES STIRLING

James Stirling(1926-1992) began as a Brutalist and High-Tech exponent. Without loosing his techno flair, Stirling dallied with Po-Mo design, juicing up his buildings from the 1970s onward with a range of historic references. Enlivened by bright colors and undulating walls, Stirling‘s work is both monumental and casual.

http://www.frontdesk.co.in/forum/


JAMES STIRLING

No 1 Poultry, London , 1986

http://www.frontdesk.co.in/forum/


JAMES STIRLING Dissonance (Inharmonious) as an Aesthetic Strategy: In his vivacious and engaging design for the New Staatsgalerie (New State Gallery) in Stuttgart, Germany, James Stirling combined classical forms with bright green, pink, and blue painted elements and seemingly imbalanced lines meeting at awkward and unpredictable angles.

Neue Staatsgalerie, Stuttgart, Germany, 1977–1984. http://www.frontdesk.co.in/forum/


Thank You for POSTING This forum is for, by and of the architect fraternity and it will only grow by creating New Thread and New Reply, we can also comment in existing threads by clicking following button on upper right corner of forum . Post your expertise valuable comments in forum regularly.

http://www.frontdesk.co.in/forum/


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

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