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  • Geert Lovink

    Social Media Abyss. Critical Internet Cultures and the…

  • Tanja Seeböck

    Schwünge in Beton. Die Schalenbauten von Ulrich Müther

  • Honey-Suckle Company

    Spiritus

  • Arna Mackic

    Mortal Cities and Forgotten Monuments

  • Moritz Behrens, Christian Berkes,…

    Sentiment Architectures. A Field Trip to Behaviour and…

  • Donna J. Haraway

    Manifestly Haraway

  • A. Andraos, N. Akawi (eds)

    The Arab City: Architecture and Representation

  • HKW (Ed.)

    Nervous Systems

  • Felicity D. Scott

    Outlaw Territories. Environments of Insecurity/…

  • Owen Hatherley

    Landscapes of Communism. A History Through Buildings

  • Rashid Ali, Andrew Cross

    Mogadishu. Lost Moderns

  • Schmal, Elser, Scheuermann (eds.)

    Making Heimat. Germany, Arrival Country

  • Helge Mooshammer, Peter Mörtenböck

    Visual Cultures as Opportunity

  • Simone Neuenschwander, Thomas Thiel (…

    Transparenzen/Transparencies

  • A. Angelidakis, V. Pizzigoni, V. Scelsi…

    Super Superstudio

  • Peter Chadwick

    This Brutal World

  • Naomi Pollock

    Sou Fujimoto

  • P. Cachola Schmal, P. Sturm

    Zukunft von gestern - Visionäre Entwürfe von Future Systems…

  • Ina Blom

    The Autobiography of Video. The Life and Times of a Memory…

  • Timothy Morton

    Dark Ecology. For a Logic of Future Coexistence

  • Benjamin H. Bratton

    The Stack. On Software and Sovereignty

  • Nadine Barth (Hg.)

    Berlin Raum Radar. Neue Architekturfotografie

  • Biljana Ciric, Nikita Yingqian Cai (Ed)

    Active Withdrawals. Life and Death of Institutional Critique

  • Burkhardt Meltzer

    Rethinking the Modular. Adaptable Systems in Architecture…

  • Bibbl. Herzog von Bayern

    Gedruckt und erblättert. Das Fotobuch als Medium…

  • Estelle Blaschke

    Banking on Images. From the Bettmann Archive to Corbis

  • Georg Windeck

    Construction Matters

  • Walter Benjamin.

    Sonnets

  • Glenn Adamson, Julia Bryan-Wilson

    Art in the Making: Artists and Their Materials from the…

  • David Toop

    Into the Maelstrom: Music, Improvisation and the Dream of…

  • Nicolas Grospierre

    Modern Forms. A Subjective Atlas of 20th-Century…

  • Slavoj Zizek

    Against the Double Blackmail: Refugees, Terror and Other…

  • Ian Brennan

    How Music Dies (or Lives): Field Recording and the Battle…

  • Gustav Roßler

    Der Anteil der Dinge an der Gesellschaft. Sozialität -…

  • Berlinische Galerie (Hg.)

    Visionäre der Moderne. Paul Scheerbart, Bruno Taut, Paul…

  • Walter Grasskamp

    Das Kunstmuseum. Eine erfolgreiche Fehlkonstruktion

  • Kathrin Peters, Andrea Seier (Hg.)

    Gender & Medien-Reader

  • Nadir Z. Lahiji

    Can Architecture Be An Emancipatory Project? Dialogues on…

  • Siegfried Ebeling

    Der Raum als Membran

  • Patrick Joseph

    Poet Fool

  • M. Böttger, S. Carsten, L. Engel (Hg)

    Spekulationen Transformationen. Überlegungen zur Zukunft…

  • Joyce Hwang, Martha Bohm, Gabrielle…

    Beyond Patronage. Reconsidering Models of Practice

  • Charlotte Klonk (Ed.)

    New Laboratories. Historical and Critical Perspectives on…

  • Gwen Allen

    The Magazine (Documents of Contemporary Art)

  • Steven Shaviro

    Discognition

  • Helen Armstrong

    Digital Design Theory

  • Gerald Raunig

    Dividuum. Machinic Capitalism and Molecular Revolution

  • Mario Gooden

    Dark Space. Architecture, Representation, Black Identity

  • Mike Watson

    Towards a Conceptual Militancy

  • Guttmann, Kaiser, Mazanek, diachron (…

    Jan Turnovsky: The Weltanschauung as an Ersatz Gestalt.…

  • Rebecca Roke

    Nanotecture: Tiny Built Things

  • M. del Junco, M. Toledo (Eds.)

    Max Bill

  • Peter Pál Pelbart

    Cartography of Exhaustion. Nihilism Inside Out

  • Salomon Frausto

    Scenes from the Good Life. Nine investigations into the…

  • Annette Gilbert (Ed.)

    Publishing as Artistic Practice

  • Daniel M. Abramson

    Obsolescence. An Architectural History

  • Isabelle Graw, Ewa Lajer-Burcharth (Eds…

    Painting beyond Itself. The Medium in the Post-medium…

  • Liam Gillick

    Industry and Intelligence

  • Robert Stalla (Hg.)

    Bauen mit Künstlern: Architekt Peter Ottmann

  • Georg Diez/Christopher Roth

    80*81: What Happened?

  • Keith Evan Green

    Architectural Robotics. Ecosystems of Bits, Bytes, and…

  • S. De Bondt, F. Muggeridge

    The Form of the Book Book

  • K. Busch, B. Meltzer, T. von Oppeln (Hg)

    Ausstellen: Zur Kritik der Wirksamkeit in den Künsten

  • Fiona McGovern

    Die Kunst zu zeigen: Künstlerische Ausstellungsdisplays bei…

  • Hu Fang

    Sou Fujimoto. Towards a Non-Intentional Space. About Sou…

  • Nicholas Felton, Sven Ehmann, Robert…

    Photoviz. Visuailzing Information Through Photography

  • Rudolf Fischer, Wolf Tegethoff (Hg.)

    Modern wohnen. Möbeldesign und Wohnkultur der Moderne

  • W. Cobbing, R. Cooper (Eds.)

    Boooook: The Life and Work of Bob Cobbing

  • Robert Klanten, Sofia Borges (Eds.)

    The Tale Of Tomorrow. Utopian Architecture in the Modernist…

  • Ray Lucas

    Research Methods for Architecture

  • Giorgio Agamben

    The Use of Bodies

  • Mathilde Villeneuve, Virginie Bobin (…

    Republications

  • Andreas Seltzer

    Der Sendermann / The Transmitter Man

  • Lada Umstätter (Hg)

    Le Corbusier und die Macht der Fotografie

  • Tilman Baumgärtel (Hg)

    Pirate Essays. A Reader on International Media Piracy

  • Paul B. Preciado

    TESTO JUNKIE: Sex, Drogen und Biopolitik in der Ära der…

  • Guendalina Salimei

    Luigi Moretti. Terme Bonifacio VIII Fiuggi 1963 - 1969

  • Henri Lefebvre

    Das Recht auf Stadt

  • Gijs Wallis de Vries

    Archescape. On the tracks of Piranesi

  • Christopher Beanland

    Concrete Concept. Brutalist Buildings Around the World

  • Stephen Willats

    Vision and Reality

  • Anja Schwanhäußer (ed)

    Sensing the City. A Companion to Urban Anthropology

  • Jeannette Kuo, Frank Barkow (Eds.)

    Space of Production. Projects and Essays on Rationality,…

  • Claudia Molitor

    Sonorama: Listening to the view from the train

  • David Keenan

    England's Hidden Reverse. Coil, Current 93, Nurse with…

  • Nils Aschenbeck

    Reformarchitektur. Die Konstituierung der Ästhetik der…

  • Christian Schittich (Hg.)

    Best of Detail: Beton / Concrete

  • August Sarnitz, Inge Scholz-Strasser (…

    Private Utopia: Cultural Setting of the Interior in the…

  • René Zechlin (Hg.)

    Wie leben? Zukunftsbilder von Malewitch bis Fujimoto

  • Loretta Lees, Hyun Bang Shin, Ernesto…

    Planetary Gentrification

  • Srećko Horvat

    The Radicality of Love

  • Busch, Klanten, Hellige (Hg.)

    The Age of Collage Vol. 2: Contemporary Collage in Modern…

  • André Tavares

    The Anatomy of the Architectural Book

  • Susanne Leeb

    Die Kunst der Anderen. "Weltkunst" und die…

  • Heike Jenss (Ed.)

    Fashion Studies. Research Methods, Sites and Practices

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    Arme Gemeinschaft. Die Moderne Rousseaus

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    Schriften zur Kunst

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    Öffentliche Gestaltungsberatung. Public Design Support 2011…

Raw Concrete. The Beauty of Brutalism

The raw concrete buildings of the 1960s constitute the greatest flowering of architecture the world has ever seen. The biggest construction boom in history promoted unprecedented technological innovation and an explosion of competitive creativity amongst architects, engineers and concrete-workers. The Brutalist style was the result.
Today, after several decades in the shadows, attitudes towards Brutalism are slowly changing, but it is a movement that is still overlooked, and grossly underrated.
Raw Concrete overturns the perception of Brutalist buildings as the penny-pinching, utilitarian products of dutiful social concern. Instead it looks a little closer, uncovering the luxuriously skilled craft and daring engineering with which the best buildings of the 1960s came into being: magnificent architectural visions serving clients rich and poor, radical and conservative.
Beginning in a tiny hermitage on the remote north Scottish coast, and ending up backstage at the National Theatre, Raw Concrete embarks on a wide-ranging journey through Britain over the past sixty years, stopping to examine how eight extraordinary buildings were made – from commission to construction – why they have been so vilified, and why they are beginning to be loved. In it, Barnabas Calder puts forward a powerful case: Brutalism is the best architecture there has ever been, and perhaps the best there ever will be.
Pressestimmen
"The best introduction to this most exciting and visceral period of British architecture – a learned and passionate book." (Simon Bradley, author of The Railways)
"Part history, part aesthetic autobiography, wholly engaging and liable to convince those procrastinators sitting (uncomfortably) on the concrete fence." (Jonathan Meades)
"A compelling and evocative read, one that is meticulously researched, and filled with insight and passion. Through Barnabas Calder’s personal narrative we gain a deep understanding and appreciation of a tough subject." (Kate Goodwin, Head of Architecture, Royal Academy of Arts)
"A fascinating odyssey through Britain's Brutalist landscape. The journey is sometimes breathtaking, but always insightful and informed. By its end, we understand the complexity, skill, and vision, as well as the politics, that created the buildings he explores in such loving detail." (Elizabeth Darling, author of Re-Forming Britain)
"Barnabas Calder is a self-outed lover of concrete, a man who doesn’t visit buildings but makes “pilgrimages”. He holds back on neither his praise for the objects of his passion, nor his wrath against those who threaten them. Buy this excellent book, read it and go out and hug your nearest lofty edifice in concrete and glass!" (Neil Baxter, The Royal Incorporation of Architects in Scotland)
"This engrossing book by a fellow self-confessed concrete lover is both a witty travelogue and memoir and the clear-sighted history of Brutalist buildings. Barnabas Calder relishes the craftsmanship, the financial back stories, and the aims and ambitions of a diverse generation of architects, whose works deserve our sympathy." (Catherine Croft, Director, Twentieth Century Society)
"This celebration of all things concrete will please both its aficionados and those who find it hard to love … Calder’s distinctive approach is a combination of scholarliness with personal association … An engaging and accessible guide for those drawn towards these ex-monstrosities." (The Observer, 'New Review')
"Calder provides the ideal eye-opening introduction for the curious general reader. It deserves a large audience … This is a charmingly personal book, authoritatively knowledgeable and spikily argumentative." (Literary Review)
"This is a strongly-argued and at times refreshingly polemical book, one guaranteed to change your opinion of an ambitious and much-maligned architectural style that, like it or not, has had a profound effect on our built environment." (The National)
"Calder’s book is the very antithesis of the recent glut of coffee-table-style, #brutalism, which focus primarily on appearance. By adopting a personal perspective, he humanises what is often demonised as an alienating material." (Blueprint Magazine)
"An excellent – and highly readable – guide … If you’re interested in Brutalism as architecture and construction practice, if you’re interested in its meaning and its context, buy this book." (Municipial Dreams)


Barnabas Calder
Raw Concrete. The Beauty of Brutalism
William Heinemann, 2016, 978-0434022441