Redirigiendo al acceso original de articulo en 24 segundos...
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Half a Century of Liberation: From Objectivity to Amnesty

Ignacio Senra    

Resumen

Amnesty for Constructed Reality, 1978, is the synthesis of the action taken by Haus-Rucker-Co. Laurids Ortner recovered the ideas of New Objectivity to defend the entire existing urban landscape: ?The debate about our built environment has become primarily a problem of aesthetic judgment. They are criteria for visual perception which concern us much more than the actual physical risk factors. What is usually seen as our environment is characterized by adjectives that, according to their level of sophistication, ranging from emotionally charged words like ugly, sad and chaotic the so-called objective terms as inaccessible and monotonous.?Haus-Rucker-Co Manifesto continues a key line of thought in both artistic and architectural practice during the middle decades of the 20th century: ?a profoundly liberating attitude that allowed finding value in places and objects usually judged as ugly by architects.? These words by Scott Brown justify movements often considered opposites. From ?industrial? early Modern to ?commercial? postmodern, the invocation of objectivity and suppression of judgment have served as major theoretical arguments. If, during the 1920s the principles of the Neue Sachlichkeit served as the basis for a reaction against German Expressionism, the recovery by Alison and Peter Smithson in England in the fifties would be used by Venturi and Scott Brown as a starting point for his theories of non-prosecution.As critics denounced (Lootsma, Koetter, Frampton ...) the problem of this ?permissive? attitude ?if we use the term introduced by Scott Brown as a principle? lies in the danger of falling into resignation. This uncritical attitude, wrapped in values of respect, eliminates the socio-political consciousness of the architect and risks falling into the immediacy of understanding the amnestied object directly as a model.

Palabras claves

 Artículos similares

       
 
Ignacio Senra     Pág. 132 - 145
s-

 
Selma Harrington, Branka Dimitrijevic, Ashraf M. Salama     Pág. 178 - 192
Bosnia and Herzegovina is one of the successor states of former Yugoslavia, with a history of dramatic conflicts and ruptures. These have left a unique heritage of interchanging prosperity and destruction, in which the built environment and architecture ... ver más
Revista: ARCHNET-IJAR

 
Pedro Górgolas Martín    
La historia de nuestro país en el último medio siglo, se ha caracterizado por la sucesión de diferentes periodos de boom inmobiliario que han tenido una expresión territorial característica avalada por el tipo de planeamiento imperante en cada uno de ell... ver más

 
Mohamed Anwer Zayed     Pág. 113 - 129
Walking has always been one of the important modes of transport all over the world. During the second half of the twentieth century, motorized modes, especially private cars, emerged. A situation of overdependence on motorized transport evolved. Recently... ver más
Revista: ARCHNET-IJAR

 
Juan J. Tuset     Pág. 150 - 152
After the Second World War, Modernism started to debate his continuity or crisis. This led many architects and critics to formulate theories and take up breaking disciplinary attitudes against that time. One of them was the English architect, urban plann... ver más