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1
New Brutalism and the Myth of Japan
Published 2020-03-01Subjects: “…new brutalism…”
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2
The New Brutalism: Ethic vs. Marxism? Ideological Collisions in Post-War English Architecture
Published 2021-08-01Subjects: “…new brutalism…”
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3
Entre ética y estética El Instituto Marchiondi de Vittoriano Viganò
Published 2015-05-01Subjects: “…new-brutalism…”
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4
Retorno a lo primitivo. Imágenes en la primera arquitectura posmoderna
Published 2020-06-01Subjects: Get full text
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5
Brutalism and Community in Middle Class Mass Housing: Be’eri Estate, Tel Aviv, 1965–Present
Published 2022-03-01“…Using the ethics of European New Brutalism, in Israel the architectural discourse locally developed a Team 10 critique of CIAM, addressing community as the main challenge of modern housing. …”
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6
New Brutalist Image 1949–55: 'atlas to a new world' or, 'trying to look at things today'
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. …”
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7
Ugliness in architecture in the Australian, American, British and Italian milieus: Subtopia between the 1950s and the 1970s
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. …”
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Fighting on Flying Machines. Wonders and Horrors of Aerial Warfare in Pilots’ Personal Narratives (1915 1918)
Published 2022-12-01“…Eventually, the paper will claim that the reference to chivalric honour was only a way to embellish a new brutal form of technological warfare.…”
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