MoMA to Host Exhibit Celebrating the Radical Brutalist Architecture of


Former Yugoslavia's brutalist beauty a photo essay Brutalist

Eastern Europe: The Latest Architecture and News Follow Tag Brutalist Belgrade: Through the Eyes of Alexey Kozhenkov March 16, 2023 Brutalism is a deeply dividing architectural style - a.


Brutalism From cool to crude and back again

In Eastern Europe there are numerous buildings presenting this style, now we will focus on five examples to better understand the common ground despite the territorial, cultural and designer differences that created them.


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The tower is one of the most significant examples of brutalism - an architectural style popular in the 1950s and 1960s, based on crude, block-like forms cast from concrete. Genex Tower, also.


10 EyeCatching Brutalist Architecture Works in Europe Spotted by Locals

Brutalist architecture across the former Eastern Bloc is inextricably associated with the totalitarian regimes that marked the history of this part of Europe during the last half of the 20th century.


Brutalist collection of vintage postcards highlight iconic Eastern Bloc

An architecture of self-interrogation in Europe and of proud defiance in postcolonial equatorial nations never sat comfortably with America's capitalist triumphalism. For many critics, Brutalism.


Brutalist Architecture in (Soviet) Cinema East European Film Bulletin

Like much Brutalist architecture, this bold design represents an update on the famous axiom of architectural modernism that form should follow function.. In the Soviet Union and Eastern bloc (those countries in Eastern Europe emerged as soviet vassal states after the Second World War, with communist rulers heavily influenced by the USSR.


Can Poland’s Faded Brutalist Architecture Be Redeemed? The New York Times

Much of the brutalist architecture of eastern Europe is decrepit, but now a project aims to document and preserve it Naomi Larsson Mon 6 Aug 2018 07.47 EDT T he monumental but decaying.


8 Examples of Brutalist architecture in Germany RTF Rethinking The

Whilst emerging into prominence in 1950s Great Britain, the most iconic examples of this architectural style are arguably found in Eastern Europe - particularly in the territory formerly known.


MoMA to Host Exhibit Celebrating the Radical Brutalist Architecture of

Brutalist architecture is a style of building design developed in the 1950s in the United Kingdom following World War II. With an emphasis on construction and raw materials, the aesthetic evolved.


Brutalism in Berlin a building cult Guiding Architects

The brutalist buildings found in Eastern Europe were a way of showing off, and Bratislava became the symbol of this notion. The results? Some outstanding and strange-looking buildings, such as this upside-down pyramid-shaped Radio Station, Slovak Radio. The building highlights the Bratislava skyline but is still very much overlooked by tourists.


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To showcase Central and Eastern Europe 's "unnoticed" brutalist architecture, Zupagrafika have shot and put together more than 100 photographs in a book titled 'Eastern Blocks', inviting.


Subúrbios de concreto a arquitetura brutalista da Europa Oriental

But in Eastern Europe, which contains possibly more Brutalist structures than any other region, the style is particularly contested, a reflection of a turbulent recent history. Of course,.


Insane Bulgarian Communist Monuments Size Really Did Matter Shumen

In the United Kingdom, brutalism was featured in the design of utilitarian, low-cost social housing influenced by socialist principles and soon spread to other regions around the world, most notably Eastern Europe.


Spomenik Podgarić, Croatia Brutalist architecture, Architecture

In Eastern Europe, Brutalist buildings face particular challenges in winning advocates, according to Marie Kordovská. She is fighting to save the Hotel Thermal in the Czech spa town of Karlovy Vary.


20 Stunning Brutalist Architecture in Eastern Europe Architettura

Perhaps Eastern Europe's most tongue-in-cheek Communist-era construction is at Romania's Vidraru Dam, where a 10m statue of Prometheus (the man who stole fire from the gods) commemorates one of the Communist Bloc's biggest hydroelectricity projects. The imposing Vidraru Dam in Romania. Photo by Brent Winebrenner


Soviet Brutalist buildings from the mid20th century Business Insider

The New York Museum of Modern Art dedicated an exhibition to photographs to Brutalist architecture in 2018, in effect rehabilitating a style of building that many would rather see disappear.