Arch 210
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- Hubsch's essay In What Style Should We Build
- Surveys past styles, not to pick the best one but to discern basic principles of any style
- elevator
- This invention allowed for more inhabited height; Safety brakes influential to dynamic popularity
- Jefferson
- Admired works by Soufflot, Ledoux in Paris. French architects urged him to study ancient architecture directly. Saw one building - Maison Carree (republican rome)
- Washington DC
- Planning ideas from baroque, rome and versailles
- Paris Opera
- Focus of an urban Island; Streets set it apart, new avenue connect to the louvre; District developed with fine hotels and retail
- Semper
- Believed Stylistic Chaos (greek? gothic? new?) meant modern world lacks a coherent "world view"
- Jefferson
- suggests surveyors divide land into 6-mile squares ('townships') with 36 'sections'
- Wright
- Prairie Style Houses - organic relation to site with a horizontal emphasis; Viollet Le Duc
- Pugin
- Wrote "The true principles of pointed or christian architecture"
- Arts and crafts dilemma
- hand crafted objects were expensive but luxurious. Craft look was easy to mass produce cheaply
- Victorian Ideal
- Home as sanctuary; women and children are protected from harsh, immoral world
- Gropius
- Directed the Bauhaus - Alter social structure of art and architecture by teaching both fine and applied art
- Botticher
- Professor at Berlin Bauakademie - Like Schinkel and Hubsch, seeks synthesis of Greek and Gothic, structure and style as solution to polarized debate
- Acropolis
- Jeanneret's most inspirational site was the __________ in athens
- Vienna
- Like Barcelona, Defensive walls defined city form; walls were torn down and then new development started. Unlike Paris, old city was left alone
- Semper
- Wrote Science, Industry and Art
- Botticher
- Whats good about Greek and Gothic - Their unity between skin and bones
- Jefferson
- Grid structures U.S. geography: state & county lines, railroads, towns, farms
- Mission of Modern france and medieval history
- restore and protect important medieval buildings
- Schinkel
- Built Bauakademie's new building in 1830s
- Venturi
- Wrote "Complexity and Contradiction in Architecture"
- Bauakademie's New Building
- "Prussian" Brick construction system of frame & infill
- Jefferson
- Believed independent farmers living on the land were the social foundation of democracy
- Gothic Ornament
- reflects northern tribal aesthetic
- Wagner
- Stop using historical styles! Let architecture reflect our time, modern life and construction technology
- Venturi
- Architects: Stop pretending buildings arent symbols. Decide how and what to communicate
- Ruskin
- he inspired a british anti-industrial movement: handmade objects are more beautiful and make a better society
- Modernized
- New construction for Fascist Rome ________ History
- Glass Tower
- After WWII, _________ feasible because of AC and insulated glass; symbol of international diplomacy, idealism and big business
- Washington DC and Paris
- Cities where Streets point to the monuments
- Parks
- Considered "urban lungs" giving healthy recreation and contact with nature for city dwellers: "morally beneficial"
- Sullivan
- Building should look like classical column - base, shaft, and capital
- Cottage Residences
- begins american love affair with suburban living
- England
- First to switch from agrarian to industrial economy
- Empire
- Abstracted Geometric classicsm: harsher, more modern, but clear associations with ____________
- King Ludwig of Bavaria
- Munich = Modern Capital for a Modern State, Parthenon = Perfect Model - its role in building ancient greek unity was appropriate for the German cause.
- Cerda
- Wrote "General Theory of Urbanization"; first urban theory instead of a list of city requirements
- The international style
- reduces modern architecture to 3 artistic principles: No symmetry, no ornament, and no visual weight
- Speer and Hitler
- Their Vision was for an axial boulevard through gigantic triumphal arch to largest pantheon copy ever
- Mom's house
- Ironic use of traditional Home elements; not just conventional
- Monticello
- Jefferson's Home: first and longest project. Palladian but more like a palladio. Set on top of a hill dominating the landscape (villa rotunda); focus of house extended into landscape
- Iron Columns
- Used in brand new gothic style church in paris: takes aesthetic of lightness even further
- Polemical
- Designed to provoke debate, to be radical, controversial and inspire action
- Gropius
- Fagus Factory Celebrates the curtain wall; floating glass
- Le Corbusier
- The house is a machine for living in designed to deliver health, beauty, good living, and enjoyment
- Viollet Le Duc
- medieval mindset with modern capacity. Imagines composite structures of masonry and metal. Think iron struts supporting huge stone, tile, brick vaults would mean larger spaces, less material, lighter loads, and less cost
- Style
- Questions as far as what _________ a skyscraper is.
- Semper
- Not one fixed 'truth' but a model of how form evolves: Social needs and technological advances means new forms
- Bauakademie's New Building
- Ornament is mostly color, pattern and rhythms of the brick
- Schinkel
- Decided extreme abstraction was an error. Needed balance between Structure, history and poetry
- Hubsch
- Studied philosophy and mathematics before architecture
- Reason
- One of three ruling fictions: Architecture can embody truth of its origins (laugier), geometric perfection (alberti, le corbusier) or rational method (durand), but faith in reason is faith, not reason
- Parliment
- Designed by Sir Charles Barry (classically trained architect) with Pugin being a design consultant. Had to be Gothic.
- Schinkel
- Began as Gothic Romanticist - saw medieval workshops as social ideal of collective work: a community building its identity.
- Mussolini
- Use roman past to proclaim italy's destiny
- Grotesqueness
- Free craftsmen interpret models creatively
- Italian
- Unlike Nazis, ______ fascists accepted Modern Architecture
- Greek Classicism
- "Belongs" to Germany as much as Greece
- Jeanneret
- synthesized multiple ideas about modern architecture into an influential doctrine; most influential model of the modern architect's identity
- US
- Most ____ Projects practical not symbolic
- Beecher Sisters
- Published designs for improved urban housing; emphasis in the efficient mechanical core of services
- Loos
- Ornament like graffiti and tattooing is typical of children, primitive cultures and criminals
- Gothic
- Must be unity between who is making it and how it looks
- Cologne Cathedral
- Supported by Kings of Prussia and Bravaria
- Sullivan
- Architecture should be an organic result of culture; nature is a universal source of beauty
- Hitler
- Believed in Heroically Monumental national Architecture
- Morris
- Most prominent leader of arts and crafts movement. author, product designer, and socialist
- Wagner
- Moderne Arkitektur - Modernity: not ornamental style but expression of construction
- Greenough
- Felt americans should build like Naval Architects
- Le Corbusier
- Essay " Five Elements of his new architecture"
- French Pride
- Rationality, Engineering, Industry
- Modern City
- Major Architectural challenge: how to improve the ______ _____
- Paxton
- Gardener and greenhouse designer. Designs glass and iron structures using all mass produced components. Designed the Crystal Palace.
- True Gothic
- Outward Forms + Internal Elements =
- Hubsch
- Publiched 1828 Essay - "In What Style Should We Build?" which ignites controversy
- Ruskin
- Appalled by the crystal palace and refused to go inside
- official academy opinion
- Felt gothic style inappropriate even for new church buildings
- Process
- style not just image but _______
- Cerda
- Tears down Barcelona Walls and creates a plan that is 10 times the original size; Imposes axial avenues and nodes over a grid of streets
- Parliment
- Mostly symmetrical and orderly plan which reflected Barry's Classical training. Medieval feel through Pugin's ornament and decoration
- Eisenman
- Wrote "The end of the classical, the end of the beginning, the end of the end"; argues architecture is trapped in a renaissance mentality
- Skyscrapers
- Bridge = commuters = office buildings = _______
- Seven lamps of architecture
- Book - Laws of architecture are those of morality and ethics
- Picturesque
- Designed to look as if it evolved naturally
- Johnson and Hitchcock
- MOMA Catalog - The International Style: Architecture since 1922
- Ringstrasse
- New, needed Viennese Institutions (town hall, university, parliment) located around a "beltway"
- Viollet Le Duc
- Appointed at Beaux Arts as a modernization of arts policy. Disaster - Quit after 2 months
- Semper
- Believed a building was not one technology but needs all four (fire, mound, roof, enclosure)
- Schinkel
- Most important architect in 19th Century Germany
- Hubsch's essay In What Style Should We Build
- Belief in Progress - more building experience means better building technology
- Hubsche's Book on Greek Architecture
- Style reflects place, time, culture, and materials
- Grew after Napoleonic invasions
- Cause of German nationhood
- Vienna Academy
- First to support Modernism
- Nazi Party
- Had strong architecture feelings and how Germany would be portrayed
- The Opera
- Paris - Triumph of Beaux-Arts planning and monumentality; separate entrances for the emperor, carriages and pedestrians
- Schinkel
- Produced designs of "Pure Radical Abstraction"
- Colonial Style
- "Georgian", modified english palladianism
- Washington Mall
- Used by Vaux and Olmsted for Central Park in NYC
- Gothic
- Americans adopted _______ for both churches and homes
- Loos
- Links Architecture with fashion
- redundance
- generous ornament
- Layered
- A _______ Structure: basement and attic - mechanical, ground floor and mezzanine - most public functions, layers of offices going up as high as technology permits
- Winckelmann's Influence
- If Greek high classicism is the "Best Ever", why choose anything else?
- Gothic
- Style rejected by the academy in France. Some appreciation; structure and spatial openness.
- Strasburg Cathedral
- Intensive Feelings of the German People
- Sullivan
- wrote "The tall office building, artistically considered" - How should a skyscraper look? Should be every inch a proud and souring thing, aesthetic of height
- Changefulness
- Free Craftsmen pointed arch
- Sublime
- Nazi projects for national monuments: __________ -scale stage sets for political spectacles of domination and unity
- Structural Rationality
- Gothic as Ideal - not just a style; way of building that makes sense
- Faith
- Post Functionalism - Whats gone: ________ in stable, single meaning
- Haussmann
- Introduced new wide roads connecting train stations ringing the city, cutting through bad areas, leading to important monuments in Paris
- Wagner
- Successful classical style architect
- Semper
- Part of Dresden's republican uprising of 1849, Refugee in Exile in Paris and London; Couldn't build so he thought and wrote
- Johann Herder
- Attacks Winckelmann - "Why should we always imitate foreigners, as if we were greeks or romans?"
- L'Enfant
- grew up at Versailles; trained as painter and engineer
- Pugin
- His Picture book showed how great medieval england was and how horrible it is in the 19th century. Links decline of Faith, design and society
- Crystal Palace
- responsible for new building technology means new sociology of construction. "Miracle Building"
- Paris
- Important influence on American Architects
- Sachlichkeit
- rationality; objectivity - direct expression of modern reality, not individual creative expression
- Venturi
- decorated Sheds are more practical and easier to read
- Ruskin
- The function of ornament is to make you happy. Classical ornament is bad - invented to make plagiarists of its architects, slaves of its workmen and sybarites of its inhabitants
- Botticher
- Wrote a book on greek and gothic construction: Argues there were two basic ways to enclose volume - Greek Trabeation (post & beam) and Gothic Arcuation (vaults)
- Ruskin
- Felt the stones of venice best embodied by the gothic. Favorite flavor of gothic was venetian. Color should come naturally from the materials - no paint
- Venturi
- Returns to the question: What is the meaning of Architecture?
- Mies
- best early designs are non buildings; loved luxury, refinement (like Loos)
- Downing
- landscape gardener influenced by english picturesque theory
- Hubsche's Book on Greek Architecture
- Architecture should be liberated from "chains of antiquity"
- Tension
- Post Functionalism - Whats left: ____________multiple meanings, fragmentation
- Botticher
- Structural "skeleton" and artistic "skin" are separate systems, but "skin" should express (reveal and explain) and nature of the "bones"
- Gropius
- Influenced by Le Corbusier's call to mass produce houses and industrialize architecture itself.
- Venturi
- Likes Growded messy decorated cities: visually interesting; Less is more = less is a bore
- Skyscraper
- Contributes to the search for an American Style
- Le Corbusier
- Like Ledoux - Architect as prophet to transform society
- Cerda
- Critical of haussmann's approach to city planning; felt haussmann impossed image of order over unresolved social needs and issues
- Viollet Le Duc
- His method of design included Program + Site Analysis, then Plan. dont impose symmetry. Determine best enclosure for plan. Then Create elevations. The Result is an organic plan - a natural not formal design process
- Viollet Le Duc
- Put in charge of restoring Vezelay. Learned about medieval design and construction by restoring churches.
- Georg Forster
- Praised Cologne Cathedral for its "thrill of the sublime"
- Morris and Company
- Company's goals: keep tradition of hand made objects alive, let style derive from production and nature, and reform middle class taste.
- Propaganda
- meant to spread his "gospel" of architecture
- Semper
- Wrote Four Elements of Architecture
- Real Modernism
- A sensibility based on the fundamental displacement of man; state of alienation, tension or absence
- Hunchback of Notre dame
- A book that praises gothic cathedrals as emblems of french culture. Inspired Viollet Le Duc to study architecture
- Sullivan
- Form Follows Function - Follows Bottischer, Greenough, and Viollet Le Duc
- bad inside good outside
- exterior is good, true architecture is freely hand made
- Paris
- Renewal of _________ as a modern city meant several poor parisians displaced over 18 years. Targeted the poor and served the Bourgeoisie
- Schinkel
- Asked "Every principal age has left behind its architectural style. Why should we not seek to discover a style for our own age?"
- Le Corbusier
- The architect: create the doric order for a new age
- Gropius
- Monumental Factory suggests dignity of workers
- Northern Colonies
- Architecture consisted of english vernacular traditions (in woods, brick)
- Heinrich Hubsch
- Traveled Italy and Greece for 4 years, preferred medieval and byzantine to classical architecture
- Mussolini
- made peace with the Vatican by clearing houses to form a Straight street leading up to the Vatican
- UVA Campus
- Classical dignity, decentralized design, separate distinct pavilions extend into the landscape; focus of campus was library
- Advertising
- Company Iconic buildings served as
- Loos
- famous essay "Ornament and Crime" - Racist rant showing cultural anxiety
- Five Points
- (Le Corbusier) Raise Building on Pilotis, Free Plan, Free Facade, Ribbon Windows, Roof Garden
- Le Corbusier
- Modern architecture should be as aesthetically pure and timeless as the parthenon
- Crystal Palace
- Buildings Started Construction revolution. Sublime Scale
- Tall
- New Engineering Technology: Build fast, cheap, light, _____
- Garnier
- Viollet Le Duc Sumitted a design for The Opera but ___________ won the competition instead
- The Opera
- Most important public building in late 19th century Paris; Multiple entrances depending on social status
- Semper
- Believed Technologies and aesthetics were linked - Fire to Ceramics, Mound to Masonry, Roof to Carpentry, Enclosure to Textiles
- Paris market
- Area of Paris Redesigned after crystal palace as all iron & glass
- Chicago Skyscrapers
- Investments for rental, not as corporate logos
- Manet
- Cultural Movement inspired by French Avant-Garde Painting by
- L'Enfant
- Plan for DC included a grid overlaid with axial boulevards
- Semper
- Professor of architecture at Dresden Academy of Fine Arts - Built Synagogue, Royal Theater
- Pugin
- The way people build reflects the way people believe and way community comes together
- Morris and Company
- Business based on an artists colony: furniture, textiles, wallpaper, interior design.
- ornament
- happiness from ________ (ruskin's ideas)
- Greenough
- Used classical style for Washington's sculpture but opposed classical style for American Architecture
- Pugin
- Felt the only acceptable style for the true expression of Chirstianity was Gothic
- Loos
- Architecture is classical and ornate. Expensive but simple elegance; plain exterior, fancy interiors
- Hubsche's Book on Greek Architecture
- Greek style cant and shouldnt be translated to different places
- Jefferson
- Rome is an appropriate model for architecture of new US government institutions
- Hubsch
- Wrote book on Greek Architecture
- Haussmann
- Appointed perfect of the Seine; Made responsible for city modernization
- Germans
- First to Europe to link gothic style to "national" identity for Political Reasons
- Efficiency
- Beecher: See the house through a woman's eyes: _________ through space, planning, and ergonomics in the kitchen, work place, and utilities
- Rundbogenstil
- Hubsch's solution. The first modern style. Short lived style, long lived question
- Gothic
- Type of architecture continuously used in England and part of search for Germany's own architecture
- Jefferson
- Southern plantation owner and enlightenment era idealist - first person to present ideas of what american architecture should be
- Viollet Le Duc
- Became critical of people he hires and more frustrated with people from Beaux Arts
- Chicago
- Skyscraper evolves in both NYC and _______
- Crystal Palace
- Structure not built by craftsmen but assembled by unskilled laborers
- Downing
- Believes it is crucial to relate house and nature
- Paris Bohemian
- Joins artistic avant-garde; helps start L'Esprit Nouveau - radical journal on art & architecture; becomes Le Corbusier
- History
- One of three ruling fictions: Architecture is timeless through universal value( perfect past styles) or pure presentness (zeitgeist) but no one moment can provide eternal validity
- Hubsch's essay In What Style Should We Build
- Any Style requires Solidity and Suitability (Firmitas & Utilitas)
- Straight Street
- Like Popes in Rome, Napoleon wanted to Regularize Paris; Image: Orderly facade, protected arcades for pedestrians
- Medieval Guild
- model for healthy integration of production, art and society. Wont make society better but better stuff.
- Grand Staircase
- At the Opera, all entrances led to the _______________ _______: The stage where the Parisians showed off for each other
- 1700s
- Time period where the first writings praised Gothic as a "German" Style
- Goethe
- Wrote essay "On German Architecture" 1772
- City as organism
- managed, structured growth to accommodate people's social, economic and physical needs; Block corners chamfered: every intersection is a piazza
- Downing
- Like Jefferson, argued country life is better than city life because it makes people moral, strong and patriotic
- Downing and Vaux
- landscape Design of the mall: natural designs unpopular, replaced with formality
- Loos
- Despite rhetoric, doesn't oppose all ornament
- Vienna
- The Buildings in gardens face and define the street; Prophetic of the 20th century Freeway
- Obelisk
- Rome-like Urbanism: America Needs at least one ________
- Correct Style for the New State
- Strong, Simplified Classicism for public institutions; Dignity without Extravagance
- Viollet Le Duc
- book on house design: Defines a design method in common use today
- Greek Trabeation and Gothic Arcuation
- Both were equally valid principles: Greek symbolism and Gothic space
- Iron
- greater strength, less material than stone, brick or wood. Mass production makes them abundant and cheap.
- Wagner
- Ornament trasnforms images of plants, flowers as geometric patterns (weatherproof garden in the city)
- Mies
- Reduce architecture to its essence to discover its aesthetic potential; Less is more, god is in the details
- Viollet Le Duc
- after 1863; Less interested in gothic style and more in applying gothic principles to modern construction
- Sullivan
- Impressed by Marshall Field Wholesale Store; skyscraper with simple exterior style, heavy stone & arches, floors visible as horizontal layers
- Eyes which do not see
- Chapters which present ships, airplanes, and automobiles as new icons of design (Le Corbusier)
- The glass Tower
- Le Corbusier's Domino structure + Gropius' curtain wall + american height = Miesian Perfection
- Propaganda
- Mussolini used Rome's archaeology and architectural history as ____________
- Gropius
- Unlike Le Corbusier - Saw architecture as engine of social revolution
- Greenough
- Wrote "American Architecture" - US should stop looking to Europe for culture and styles, Unique geography, culture and institutions require new style of architecture
- Botticher
- Wrote a book on Greek Architecture - Skin and Bones
- Victoria and Albert
- Needed a structure for the international exhibition of industrial products that had to be enormous, fast, economical and removable
- Eisenman
- Promotes and embodies architect as an intellectual
- Modern Architecture
- Serves many idologies: Fascist party headquarters, socialist revolution, postwar US Capitalism
- Jefferson
- Critical of colonial buildings: new nation should not borrow symbols from england - his architectural ideas came from both england and france
- Ruskin
- Wrote the "seven lamps of architecture"
- Beecher
- Novelist; founded a school for girls; better homes = better society, both can be improved through design
- Southern Colonies
- Aristocratic models for owners
- Walhalla
- Temple to great germans overlooking Danube
- Place Royale
- Paris was overcrowded and dense; First open space in Paris
- Ornament
- The Difference between Architecture and Building
- Hubsch's essay In What Style Should We Build
- begins decades of debate "Not just greek vs roman vs gothic" - Asks "Do new times demand a new style?"
- Pugin
- Published Book entitled "Contrast or a parallel between the noble edifices of the middle ages and corresponding buildings of the present day, shewing the present decay of taste" - Leans toward medieval buildings
- Loos
- No ornament means less time and effort; gives workers more leisure and pay
- Loos
- Architecture must be a modern gentlemen; simplicity and refinement define status
- Simplified
- New Rome: Abstracted, ___________ rather than direct copy
- Ruskin
- First professor of art history at oxford university
- L'Enfant
- French volunteer in U.S. Revolution; chosen by Washington as planner, Jefferson = consultant
- Viollet Le Duc
- Restored several churches including Notre Dame.
- Viollet Le Dec
- Writes 10 Volume Encyclopedia of Medieval Architecture
- Cottage residences
- Downing: a variety of houses that suit and express owner's status
- mental tendencies
- good ornament reflects builders' _________
- Vienna Secession
- Sponsored art shows; no single style, generally structured naturalism
- Wasmuth Portfolio
- Abstract drawings of wright buildings; emphasize wright's geometry
- Greenough
- Form should reflect a direct response to function; also uses human body as an example of good design (organic structure)
- Roman Republic
- New US Government structure modeled on _______________
- Viollet Le Duc
- Argues Gothic aesthetics are distinct from the classical - Not inferior
- Bauakademie
- Berlin's new architecture school, modeled on Paris' Ecole Polytechnique
- Modern Classicism
- Image of timeless perfection that transcends academic copying, aesthetic goal
- Representation
- One of three ruling fictions: architecture looks like architecture via symbolism (classical temples, factories), but just pretending
- Beaux-Arts
- School - emphasis on image of solidity, stability, history
- German Architects
- Their Style was responsible for Nation-Building
- Napoleon III
- Came to power on law & order, pro-business platform; secure, stable Paris requires a New Paris
- Vasari
- made gothic a pejorative term; Barbaric
- zeitgeist
- "Spirit of the age"; new architecture reflects a new social and spiritual reality
- Mies
- Also pursued the zeitgeist but not a social visionary like Gropius; Avant-garde Aesthetics, no politics
- Friedrich Wilhelm II, King of Prussia
- Schinkel's most influential work
- Paris
- With the addition of the Opera, this city set the standard for an impressive Modern City
- rigidity
- strength and endurance
- Viollet Le Duc
- Praises the gothic for its elasticity. Vaulting holds forces in equilibrium. Efficient engineering - great height and volume, minimal material. Consistency between ornament and structure
- Mies
- Like Le Corbusier, pursuit of beauty and perfection
- Cerda
- Arch/Eng sent to Paris and studied Haussmann's Changes to Paris; Employed to Change plan for Barcelona
- Naturalism
- Ornament follows not human design but god's. based on nature (plants, animals)
- Sullivan
- Search for organic american architecture influenced Frank Lloyd Wright as well
- Jefferson
- Designed university of Virginia - Public education was crucial for public participation in democracy
- Hubsch's essay In What Style Should We Build
- Reflects Hegel - philosophy of evolving, advancing culture
- Semper
- Revisits the primitive hut - Goal was not classicism but "best" style
- Von Klenze
- "There was, is and will only ever be one architecture"
- Vers Une Architecture
- Published book compiled out of Esprit Nouveau essays
- Viollet Le Duc
- Writes on Gothic construction and design principles: Gothic becomes subject of archaeological interest
- Ignores
- ________ the details: acropolis, temples = simple geometric forms, procession through site
- Ringstrasse
- Street circles old city, provides links to suburbs but keeps them separate
- Botticher
- A new style must evolve. Reflect new building technologies or else everything is just a costume; Truly modern forms will emerge from a modern material: Iron
- Le Corbusier
- The Purified City - Whats good for the single house is even better for the city
- New York city
- To break up the dense development, a park is suggested as a break in the grid