Showing 141 - 160 results of 1,763 for search '"Brutalism"', query time: 0.10s Refine Results
  1. 141

    L’ORIENTATION CLIENT AU CŒUR DU CHANGEMENT ORGANISATIONNEL AU SEIN DE LA CAISSE NATIONALE DE SÉCURITÉ SOCIALE. ENJEUX ET IMPLICATIONS by Abderrahmane MESSAOUDI

    Published 2017-06-01
    Subjects: “…changement organisationnel;orientation client;conduite de changement;résistance au changement;changement intentionnel;changement subi;changement incrémental;changement radical;changement continu;changement épisodique; changement graduel; changement brutal…”
    Get full text
    Article
  2. 142

    Tomorrow Began Yesterday by Konstantin Lidin

    Published 2014-01-01
    “…The Irkutsk architectural school, unlike the main flow of the 1960s, developed the style of Neo-Brutalism. The article draws parallels between Neo-Brutalism of the Irkutsk school and “a severe style” of the Soviet pictorial art of the same period.…”
    Get full text
    Article
  3. 143

    The Impact of Avant-Garde Art on Brutalist Architecture by Wojciech Niebrzydowski

    Published 2021-07-01
    “…Brutalism was an architectural trend that emerged after World War II, and in the 1960s and 1970s, it spread throughout the world. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  4. 144

    succession by Елена Григорьева

    Published 2021-03-01
    “…Today’s rebirth of  interest  in brutalism  is not accidental. We believe  in  its  recovery, of course, on a new level of comprehension and in new forms. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  5. 145

    A right way of looking at things by Marco Marino

    Published 2022-12-01
    “…Book review: Author: Alberto Bologna Title: Chinese Brutalism Today Subtitle: Concrete and Avant-Garde Architecture Language: English Publisher: ORO Editions Features: 21x30 cm, 298 pages, paperback, colour ISBN: 978-1-943532-38-4 Year: 2019…”
    Get full text
    Article
  6. 146

    Built in USA : Post-war Architecture / by Hitchocock, Henry-Russel, editor 231804, Drexler, Arthur, editor 358436

    Published 1952
    “…He then delves into the various architectural styles that emerged during this period, including International Style, Brutalism, and Postmodernism. Throughout the book, Hitchcock provides detailed analysis of individual buildings and architects, including Philip Johnson, Louis Kahn, and Frank Lloyd Wright. …”
    text
  7. 147

    Genius Loci and/or Zeitgeist? by Константин Лидин

    Published 2023-10-01
    “…The last “big” style built on a deep philosophical and attitudinal basis is the style of “brutalism – deconstructivism”, which was able to achieve a balance between the Genius of Place and the Spirit of the Time. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  8. 148

    New Brutalist Image 1949–55: 'atlas to a new world' or, 'trying to look at things today' by Victoria Walsh, Claire Zimmerman

    Published 2016-11-01
    “…Co-curated by the authors of this Look First feature, the display centred on a reconsideration of two key icons of the New Brutalism: Hunstanton School, completed in Norfolk in 1954; and the exhibition Parallel of Life and Art held at the ICA, London, in 1953. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  9. 149

    Ugliness in architecture in the Australian, American, British and Italian milieus: Subtopia between the 1950s and the 1970s by Marianna Charitonidou

    Published 2022-06-01
    “…Pivotal for the issues that this article addresses are Ian Nairn’s Outrage: On the Disfigurement of Town and Countryside, Robin Boyd’s The Australian Ugliness, Donald Gazzard’s Australian Outrage: The Decay of a Visual Environment, and the way the phenomenon of urban expansion is treated in these books in comparison with other books from the four national contexts under study, such as Ludovico Quaroni’s La torre di Babele and Reyner Banham’s The New Brutalism: Ethic or Aesthetic?. Particular emphasis is placed on Boyd’s articles in The Architectural Review between 1951 and 1970. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  10. 150

    Decorative Elements in the “Stalinist” Architecture of the MSSR. From Sketch to Realization by Alina OSTAPOV

    Published 2022-04-01
    “…After the monotony, it was passed to the architectural plasticity, brutalism and Soviet modernism characteristic of the time of Leonid Ilyich Brezhnev’s rule. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  11. 151

    Building Retrofit to Improve Energy Performance from Office to Accommodation. Case study: Tower Building, Nottingham, UK by Ardiani Nissa Aulia, Suhendri, Koerniawan Mochamad Donny, Budiarto Rachmawan

    Published 2018-01-01
    “…Designed in Brutalism style by architect Andrew Renton, Tower Building has 17 floors for academic and lecturers’ office function. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  12. 152

    Imaging Technologies, Visual Culture, and Architecture From 1962 to Today by Saltuk Özemir

    Published 2016-01-01
    “…The aforementioned buildings, along with the Tours Aillaud and Les Espaces d'Abraxas, all reflecting different architectural styles from Expressionism, International Style and Brutalism towards Postmodernism came to the fore. And, via the relevant mass media archeological site's finding context, the stratification processes of the shift from alphabet culture towards the image culture, which is synchronously transforming the architecture, thanks to the imaging technologies, are to be fixed.…”
    Get full text
    Article
  13. 153

    Concrete in the eyes of Uncini, Smithson and Kiefer: art of building, geological nature, decaying material by Anna Rosellini

    Published 2016-06-01
    “…The paper analyses the works of artists such as Giuseppe Uncini, Robert Smithson and Anselm Kiefer, highlighting how, just at the height of international architectural brutalism, artists of the younger generation were looking for models for the use of reinforced concrete as a powerfully metaphorical material. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  14. 154

    Altered States, Altered Spaces: Architecture, Space and Landscape in the Film and Television of Stanley Kubrick and Ken Russell by Matthew Melia

    Published 2017-12-01
    “…Stanley Kubrick and Ken Russell, at first, seem like unlikely bedfellows for a critical comparative discussion, the Baroque, excessive and romantic nature of Russell’s screen standing in apparent contrast to the structure, order, organisation, brutalism and spatial complexity of Kubrick’s. Drawing on a range of archived material, I will suggest less that Kubrick borrowed from Russell (as Russell biographer Paul Sutton does) than that their work shares a set of key spatial, architectural, iconographic and visually linguistic concerns. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  15. 155

    Alpine huts: Architectural innovations and development in the High Tatras in the second half of the 20th century by Mgr. art. Mária Novotná

    Published 2023-03-01
    “…The world learned about new architectural movements like post-war modernism, brutalism, high-tech architecture, and postmodernism. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  16. 156

    Importance of New Use of Concrete in Iraq Analysis of Development And Use of Concrete in Architecture by Mohammed Ridha Shakir Majeed

    Published 2015-04-01
    “…This was followed by the Brutalism architecture presented by Alison and Peter Smithson in England and also by Le Corbusier works in Marseille and India. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  17. 157

    Future scenarios. A cinematic perspective by François Penz

    Published 2021-03-01
    “…High-Rise, Fahrenheit 451 and A Clockwork Orange have all in common that they associate modernism and brutalism with dystopia – and we may ask ourselves – why is that? …”
    Get full text
    Article
  18. 158

    Police Encounters as Stressors: Associations with Depression and Anxiety across Race by Sirry Alang, Donna McAlpine, Malcolm McClain

    Published 2021-03-01
    “…However, research investigating police brutality as a stressor is scarce. The authors conceptualize police brutality as a stressor, examining racial variation in its effects on mental health. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  19. 159

    Svenskar i österled 1918 by ANNE Hedén

    Published 2022-06-01
    “…  The aim of this text is to documentation from the Swedish volunteers on the White side in the Finnish civil war 1918, in order to analyze the emotional discrepancy between the higher goals of the endeavour and the mostly very brutal reality of the civil war. An established view has been that the Swedish volunteers did not fully participate in the extensive brutality against the losing side in the conflict but, so to speak, stayed on the sidelines. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  20. 160

    Batons and ballots: The effectiveness of state violence in fighting against Catalan separatism by Joan Barceló

    Published 2018-06-01
    “…What are the consequences of police brutality in fighting against the Catalan secessionist movement? …”
    Get full text
    Article