Direkt zum Inhalt

Warenkorb

  • Leonardo Finotti

    A Collection of Latin American Modern Architecture

  • Werner Sewing

    No more learning from Las Vegas. Stadt, Wohnen oder…

  • Yuk Hui

    On the Existence of Digital Objects

  • Alina Serban & Kalliopi Dimou,…

    Enchanting Views: Romanian Black Sea Tourism Planning and…

  • David Blamey (Ed.)

    Specialism

  • Gabrielle Cody, Meiling Cheng (Eds.)

    Reading Contemporary Performance. Theatricality Across…

  • Andre Lepecki

    Singularities. Dance in the Age of Performance

  • M. R. Stein, L. Miller, M. Henrichs (Hg)

    Blueprint for Counter Education. Curriculum, Handbook, Eall…

  • Helen Marten

    Parrot Problems

  • Owen Hatherley

    The Chaplin Machine. Slapstick, Fordism and the Communist…

  • Lina Dokuzović

    Struggles for Living Learning. Within Emergent Knowledge…

  • Marcus Quent (Hg)

    Absolute Gegenwart

  • Fabian Frenzel

    Slumming It: The Tourist Valorisation of Urban Poverty

  • Keller Easterling

    Extrastatecraft. The Power of Infrastructure Space

  • Yuk Hui, Andreas Broeckmann

    30 Years after Les Immatériaux: Art, Science and Theory

  • Jacques Lucan

    Composition, Non-Composition. Architecture and Theory in…

  • Seth Price

    Fuck Seth Price (Second Edition, Hardcover)

  • J. Herzog, P. de Meuron

    Herzog de Meuron. Trügerische Transparenz. Beobachtungen…

  • Florentine Sack

    Open House 2. Gestaltungskriterien für eine neue…

  • Beti Zerovc

    When Attitudes Become the Norm: The Contemporary Curator…

  • Stuart Bailey (Hg.)

    Extended Caption (DDDG)

  • Luca Lo Pinto, Vanessa Joan Müller (Eds…

    Frederick Kiesler. Function Follows Vision, Vision Follows…

  • Thun-Hohenstein, Bogner, Lind, Vischer…

    Friedrich Kiesler – Lebenswelten / Life Visions

  • Ruben Pater

    The Politics of Design: A (Not So) Global Manual for Visual…

  • Giovanna Silva

    Syria, A Travel Guide to Disappearance

  • Amie Siegel

    Double Negative. Ricochet 10

  • Jens Balzer

    Pop. Ein Panorama der Gegenwart

  • Timothy D. Taylor

    Music and Capitalism. A History of the Present

  • GRAFT

    Architecture Activism

  • Nav Haq (Ed.)

    RAVE. Rave and its Influence on Art and Culture

  • Trudy Nieuwenhuys, Gemeente Museum Den…

    Constant. New Babylon. To Us, Liberty

  • Borja Ballbé

    Ordinary Landscapes. Paisajes comunes

  • Riet Wijnen (Ed.)

    abstraction creation, art non figuratif 1932

  • A. Lepik, V. S. Bader (Hg)

    World of Malls. Architekturen des Konsums

  • C. Menrad, H. Creighton (Eds.)

    William Krisel's Palm Springs

  • Brandon Labelle

    Overheard and Interrupted

  • Jessica Helfand

    Design. The Invention of Desire

  • Stephen Prina

    galesburg, illinois+

  • Agnés Laube, Michael Widrig

    Archigrafie. Schrift am Bau

  • Marc Angélil, Charlotte Malterre-…

    Housing Cairo

  • Antje Ehmann, Carles Guerra (Eds.)

    Harun Farocki. Another Kind of Empathy

  • T. J. Demos

    Decolonizing Nature: Contemporary Art and the Politics of…

  • Hans Ulrich Obrist

    Lives of the Artists, Lives of the Architects

  • Gloria Moure(Ed.)

    Behind the facts. Interfunktionen 1968-1975

  • Roberto Simanowski

    Facebook-Gesellschaft

  • Berliner Hefte zu Geschichte und…

    Die Mauerpark-Affäre

  • Barnabas Calder

    Raw Concrete. The Beauty of Brutalism

  • François J. Bonnet

    The Order of Sounds. A Sonorous Archipelago

  • Leon van Schaik

    Practical Poetics in Architecture

  • Pozsár Péter

    Builders. Socially engaged Architecture from Hungary

  • Malzacher, Öğüt, Tan (eds.)

    The Silent University - Toward a Transversal Pedagogy

  • Markus Miessen

    Crossbenching: Toward a Proactive Mode of Participation,…

  • Bundesamt für Kultur (CH)

    Betrachtungen einer Ungestalt. Die schönsten Schweizer…

  • Francesca Balena Arista

    Poltronova Backstage: Archizoom, Sottsass and Superstudio.…

  • David Joselit

    Nach Kunst

  • Erika Balsom, Hila Peleg

    Documentary Across Disciplines

  • Kerstin Stakemeier, Marina Vishmidt

    Reproducing Autonomy. Work, Money, Crisis and Contemporary…

  • Frank Berzbach

    Formbewusstsein. Eine kleine Vernetzung der alltäglichen…

  • Jens Hoffmann, Claudia J. Nahson (eds.)

    Roberto Burle Marx: Brazilian Modernist

  • Jacek Mrowczyk

    VeryGraphic. Polish Designers of the 20th Century

  • Sabine Bitter & Helmut Weber

    Front, Field, Line, Plane. Researching the Militant Image

  • Annette Gigon, Mike Guyer, Felix…

    Residential Towers

  • 9. Berlin Biennale für zeitgenössische…

    The Present in Drag

  • 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…

Radical City 01

The city is where Italian radical architecture represented and experimented its theories. Having developed a first survey entitled “Dopo la rivoluzione. Azioni e protagonisti dell’architettura radicale italiana” [“After the revolution. Actions and protagonists of Italian radical architecture”] where I let those protagonists take the stand, for this new issue of archphoto2.0 I decided to approach the issue of the radical city. Or the place the radicals chose for their theoretical and practical experimentations. This change of point of view provides a new reading of radical architecture as it embraces the entire movement and avoids an excessive focus on individual fragments, which I think would diminish the radicals’ theoretical power.
The goal is writing a new, as never written before, page of architectural history by using the ‘60s political and cultural context as a departure point. The student protests for a better education in universities, sit-ins, strikes, the revolutionary wave from Berkeley, the People Park, the birth of pop art in England, the crisis of architecture after the end of the modern movement, the destructuring of language, the disciplinary cross-over of art, architecture, music, and theatre contributed to the cultural background that generated the radical adventure. An adventure that took shape between Florence, Turin and Milan and created connections with other movements of the new architectural avant-garde in Austria (Pichler, Haus Rucker, Coop Himmelblau, Hollein) and the UK (Archigram, Cedric Price).
Florence was one of movement’s main hubs as the city of the two Leonardos – Ricci and Savioli who, along with Eco and Konig, promoted the development of radical theories. In Turin a key role was played by Pietro Derossi with his Arte Povera connections, while the Milan scene was dominated by Ugo La Pietra, Sandro Mendini, Ettore Sottsass and Fernanda Pivano.
While the early projects remained theoretical proposals, some, including Archizoom, Superstudio, Strum, established an ambiguous relationship with design that, in time, became more and more important after the international exhibition “Italy: the new domestic landscape” curated by Ambasz at the MoMa in 1972; the only exception was Zziggurat, the last radical group. Others like UFO, Gianni Pettena, Ugo La Pietra and 9999 chose the “piazza” (public space) for their theoretical/practical experimentation as the adequate venue for installations and performances that used the same language as that of artists. But the “piazza” was even more the place for a direct connection with the students and their protests against the academy and the ruling system – that influenced the development of UFO, the group led by Lapo Binazzi who, between inflatable objects and performances, admirably interpreted the relationship between semiology and architecture. Public space became the venue for an exchange between artists and radicals – for example with Campo Urbano (curated by Luciano Caramel in Como in 1969), the meeting place of La Pietra, Pettena+Chiari and Paolini; or with the dialogue between Robert Smithson and Gianni Pettena. There is, however, one place in particular that an architect in the ‘60s saw as uniquely capable of expressing the concept of modernity: the disco club. Every radical architect designed one. In Florence, Superstudio designed Mach2, while 9999 created and managed Space Electronic, the most famous club, where the group organized concerts by emerging British bands, happenings and experimental theatre performances. UFO’s Bamba Issa disco club in Forte dei Marmi and the Sherwood restaurant in Florence, La Pietra’s Altre Cose boutique with its Bang Bang disco club in Milan. The Piper disco club designed and managed by Pietro Derossi in Turin became an Arte Povera meeting place. This new scene so keen on entertainment was promoted by Leonardo Savioli who, inspired by his assistants such as Adolfo Natalini, proposed the disco club as a design type in his furniture and interior design course at the School of Architecture in Florence; of course, the designers of the Piper in Rome had also been his students. Another important aspect of this age was the flourishing of independent publications: from Archigram’s fanzines to La Pietra’s In and In più, up to 9999’s furry catalogue for an event at Space Electronic with Superstudio. The new wave of experimentation was championed by magazines such as AD and Casabella with Sandro Mendini emerging with his revolutionary approach to cover design and focus on images as crucial expressive devices.
Inspired by the historical avant-gardes – dada, futurism and expressionism, radical architecture played a crucial role in architecture history seldom if ever mentioned in official histories of architecture and today represents a treasure still be to be unveiled and researched. This issue of archphoto2.0 tries to rewrite history by providing a new point of view as the possible source of new achievable utopias.
www.archphoto.it


Archphoto 2.0
Radical City 01
Archphoto, 2012, 9788895459080