Full-text resources of CEJSH and other databases are now available in the new Library of Science.
Visit https://bibliotekanauki.pl

Results found: 2

first rewind previous Page / 1 next fast forward last

Search results

Search:
in the keywords:  architecture parlante
help Sort By:

help Limit search:
first rewind previous Page / 1 next fast forward last
PL
Artykuł dotyka problematyki wyjątkowego charakteru twórczości Hansa Holleina (1934–2014) w kontekście jej ekspresywności, symbolicznego przekazu i umocowania w tradycji. Autorskie dokonania, pomimo określonych kontrowersji, pozwalają uznać tego architekta za postać, która przyczyniła się do identyfikacji austriackiej i niemieckiej myśli architektonicznej na tle międzynarodowego uniwersalizmu. Tekst odnosi się także do zagadnienia „architektury elitarnej”, z jaką utożsamiał się projektant, wobec ogólnie panujących nowoczesnych tendencji.
EN
The article concerns the issue of the unique character of Hans Hollein (1934–2014) in the context of its expressiveness, the symbolic transmission and traditional support. Despite specific controversy, the author’s achievements make him the one, who helped to identify the Austrian and German architectural thought against the background of international universalism. Against the general modern trends the text also raises the question of architectural elite with which he identified a designer.
EN
The article shows literary and documentary presentations of the first years of building Nowa Huta in the context of the avant-garde gesture of blurring the traces of the past and attempting at establishing a completely new beginning. Another equally important goal is to show how Nowa Huta, a model city of socialist visions, was organized by the dialectic of materialization and dematerialization which governed both the rhetoric of architectural visions and descriptions of human – especially women’s – corporeality. The author combines idealized (and therefore immaterial) approach whose ideological senses are projected onto the architecture of a utopian city with the socialistic approach to the body as a precisely shaped form whose biological and generally material qualities are disciplined. The author describes a few attempts of bodily disobedience to the dictate of the form, exposing the gap between postulated construction plans and the reality of everyday life entangled in the materiality of architecture and the biological nature of the body.
first rewind previous Page / 1 next fast forward last
JavaScript is turned off in your web browser. Turn it on to take full advantage of this site, then refresh the page.