Nothing Less than Literal : Architecture after Minimalism

Nothing Less than Literal : Architecture after Minimalism

more information about Nothing Less than Literal : Architecture after Minimalism

Nothing Less than Literal : Architecture after Minimalism

Editorial Reviews Review "adventurous... essays open up a greater range of debate and questioning that has recently disappeared in discussions about 'nothing more than architecture.'" -- Constructs Book Description In Nothing Less than Literal, Mark Linder shows how minimalist art of the 1960s was infiltrated by architecture, resulting in a reconfiguration of the disciplines of both art and architecture. Linder traces the exchange of concepts and techniques between architecture and art through a reading of the work of critics Clement Greenberg, Colin Rowe, Michael Fried, and the artist-writer Robert Smithson, and then locates a recuperation of "the architecture of minimalism" in the contemporary work of John Hejduk and Frank Gehry. "Literal" was not only a term used by Fried to attack minimalism; it was a key term for Greenberg as well, and in both cases their use of that term coincides with discussions of the architectural qualities of art. Linder gives us the first thorough examination of the role that architectural concepts, techniques of representation, and practices played in the emergence of minimalism. Beginning with a comparison of the "postcubist" writings of Clement Greenberg and Colin Rowe, he reveals surprising affinities in their critical formulations of pictorialism -- including the use by both of an analogy between cubist collage and architectural space. This is followed by an account of the sharp differences between Michael Fried and Robert Smithson; Linder contrasts the sublimation of space and refusal of architecture in Fried's concept of the "radically abstract" with Smithson's explicit embrace of architectural thinking and his complex concepts of space. Finally, Linder looks at particular instances in the work of two architects who, through collaboration with artists, engaged the legacy of literalism -- John Hejduk's Wall House and Frank Gehry's decade-long fascination with the figure of the fish. Linder shows how the "productive impropriety" of transdisciplinary borrowing in the discourses surrounding minimalism serves as a counterexample to the prevalent perception of "disciplines" as conservative and institutionalizing. Nothing Less than Literal : Architecture after Minimalism

Nothing Less than Literal : Architecture after Minimalism,Mark Linder,The MIT Press,0262122669,20th century,Architectural criticism,Architecture,Criticism,Formalism (Art),General,History,History - General,Interior Design - General,Minimal architecture,Architecture / General

Nice Books:

  1. Nottingham Transformed: Architecture And Regeneration for the New Millennium
  2. Now-Time/Image-Space. Temporalization of Politics in Walter Benjamin's Philosophy of History and Art
  3. Now Underground: Arte Grafica Calligrafia Moda Fotografia
  4. NOX: Machining Architecture
  5. Nude
  6. Nudes: Indexxi
  7. Nudie the Rodeo Tailor: The Life and Times of the Original Rhinestone Cowboy
  8. Nursery in a Weekend (In a Weekend)
  9. Nutcracker Activity Book (Dover Little Activity Books)
  10. Nutcracker Ballet Paper Doll

Nice Books

Nice Books

Recommended Books

  1. Painting the Secret World of Nature
  2. That's What Mamas Do
  3. Just a Geek
  4. Investing in Real Estate With Other People's Money: 100s of Insider Strategies for Turning a Small I
  5. First the Seed : The Political Economy of Plant Biotechnology
  6. Exploring Biology in the Laboratory
  7. Essential Statistics for the Social and Behavioral Sciences: A Conceptual Approach
  8. Hamlet
  9. Final Fantasy: Diana, the Angel and the Holy Grail
  10. Energy Boost
  11. Everyone Can Quilt With Kaye Wood
  12. Guided Imagery with Children
  13. Daily Life of the Etruscans
  14. Field Guide to Shells in Atlantic Gulf Coast
  15. Lonely Planet 2002 Out to Eat London