Surrealism and Architecture
by:  Thomas Mical
size:   					 				 				 			 				25.84 MB 
type:   					 				 				 			 				  				  				.pdf  				
language:   					 				 				 				en  
[ english ]
Number Of Pages: 		  		352 	
Publication Date: 		  		2004-12-17 	
http://ifile.it/ml0ewc/ebooksclub.org__Surrealism_and_Architecture.l_59x36800jx90x89.pdf
Product Description: 
Surrealism and Architecture examines a long overlooked topic: the  relationship of surrealist thought to architectural theory and practice.  This is a historically informed examination of architecture's perceived  absence in surrealist thought, surrealist tendencies in the theories  and projects of modern architecture and the place of surrealist thought  in contemporary design methods and theories. 
 This book represents the most current insights into the historical and  contemporary relationships of surrealism in the thought and practice of  modern architecture. Of all the artistic modernism affecting the design  of buildings and cities, only surrealism has remained unexplored, yet  the surrealist critiques of rationalism, orthodoxy, and the spatial  production of meaning have a place in the history of modernism. In the  20 essays, the role of the subconscious, the techniques of  defamiliarization, aesthetic and social forces affecting the objects,  interiors, cities and landscapes of the 20th century arerevealed in the  works of Breton, Dali, Aragon, Le Corbusier, Neimeyer, Kiefer, Hejduk,  Tschumi, and others ranging across the history of modern art and  architecture. The book contains a diversity of voices, methodologies,  and insights to bring into sharp focus what is often suppressed in the  histories of the modernist avant-garde. This comprehensive collection  examines the theoretical, visual, and spatial practices of writers,  artists, architects, and urbanists with particular emphasis on the  critique of the everyday world-view, offering alternative models of  subjectivity, artistic effect, and the production of meanings in the  built world. 
 With the renewed interest in the surrealist movement, this timely  collection of illustrated essays is the first to look at the  architectural possibilities of this distinct modern artistic movement  which was interdisciplinary and international.  This book offers a model  for a new approach to historically rigorous analysis of  interdisciplinary artistic practice. It will be of interest to scholars  in the histories of modernism, students and practitioners of art and  architecture, cultural studies, and urban studies.