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Brazil's Modern Architecture [Hardcover]

Elisabetta Andreoli , Adrian Forty


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Book Description

15 Nov 2004 0714842923 978-0714842929
This is the most comprehensive survey and analysis of twentieth-century Brazilian Architecture, written by Brazilian architects and writers for an international audience. Its key events and buildings appear not in a conventional chronological account but within a series of thematic chapters (critical reception, construction issues, urbanism, typological description of the modern house, affordable housing and new fields of practice, survey of recent works). It is a history of Brazilian modern architecture retold with a Brazilian voice by the new generation of critics and historians. This book offers a fresh reading of the well-known era of high-modernism of the 1930s-1960s placing it within both the context of architecture before and since and the broader changes taking place in Brazilian culture at the time. It also charts post-Brasilia developments, including contemporary projects, showing how architects have adapted to the contradictions of an increasingly polarised society and the relevance of Brazilian architecture for current debates around issues such as large-scale urban growth and the tension between local identities and global civilisation. Covering around 200 projects, it is extensively illustrated with both historical black and white photographs and new colour photographs and drawings In cultural terms, Brazil is famous for its music and its architecture. As the largest and richest country in Latin America, Brazil is set apart from the others by its language, and by the ethnic diversity of its population, all of which contribute to its cultural distinctiveness. Yet, the architecture of twentieth-century Brazil is all too often represented by the work of one man (Oscar Niemeyer) or by two cities (Rio de Janeiro and Sao Paulo). This book is a study of Brazilian architecture in the twentieth-century, from the first modern houses of the 1920s and Le Corbusier's seminal visits to the country, through the well-known 'heroic' period of the 1940s-1950s and its crisis post-1964 up to contemporary developments. The high-modernist era coincided with the period of Brazil's most rapid economic growth around the middle of the century, when the country was transformed from a predominantly agricultural economy with coffee as its principal export, into an urbanised society with an industrial economy that saw the creation of Brasilia, one of the most utopian projects of the Modern Movement. Towards the end of this period, as society became increasingly polarised between a prosperous middle class and a very poor underclass, architects also became more pre-occupied with the nature of public buildings and the problems linked to accelerated urban growth. What has usually been seen as a period of creative experimentation in architecture underwent a crisis with the advent of the military dictatorship in 1964, while the rapid growth of the economy was sustained and even increased, with the consequent rise in activity of the building industry until the 1980s, one of the inherent contradictions of Brazil that this book seeks to address. While conventional accounts treat 1964 as the end of Brazilian architecture, this was not the case. Brazilian architects adapted to the changed circumstances, and developed new strategies that were no less creative, but sometimes less demonstrative. This has been particularly so since the restoration of democracy in the early 1980s, and again, a major theme of the book is to show continuities between the more recent work and that of the high-modernist era of the mid-century. The book will be edited by Elisabetta Andreoli and Adrian Forty, who will frame the main chapters with the introduction and a foreword to the survey of recent works. Five Brazilian writers will contribute essays to the body of the book that, together, provide a thorough study of modernist architecture and beyond in Brazil, and examine the works from the 'inside', explaining the social, cultural and political context that is so crucial to understanding the architecture.

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'The creative richness of Brazilian architecture, and the very high critical level of some of the writing in this book [...] suggest that far from worrying about Brazil being provincial, as the authors fear, it is we in Europe how need to learn from their experience...the book is filled with the most beautiful, adventurous modern architecture one has seen anywhere...By combining immense beauty with deep tragedy, perhaps this book exactly captures the spirit of Brazilian architecture, as in the samba by Cazuza, its beauty making everything "por um segundo mais feliz" (a little happier, for just a moment).' (Thomas Muirhead, Building Design)'Tells the story...of what made the country's populace open to Le Corbusier's radicalism and Niemayer's modernism while living in shanty towns that would disgrace Calcutta.' (Arena)'Beautifully illustrated.' (RIBA (Royal Institute of British Architects))'Exemplary...The text is serious yet clear, and enhanced by stunning photographs...Best of all, there is a list of buildings to visit, and contacts for those open only by appointment. Plan your trip now.' (Architect's Journal)'Serves up a selection of the most heroic and expressionist modern architecture.' (Wallpaper*)'Having spent a recent trip to Brazil constantly in this book's company, I'm now inordinately attached to it. At each stop, it was reverently taken out of the suitcase, placed on the desk, consulted, then packed up and hauled on to the next stop...Overall, I could not have asked for a more useful or enlightened guide than Brazil's Modern Architecture...well-written...meticulously produced...beautiful visual material.' (Contemporary)'The introduction provides an excellent overview of Brazilian Modernism and its context...an elegantly produced, generously illustrated and highly readable book...It is rare to find a book of this kind covering so well a wide range of issues.' (The Architectural Review) --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

About the Author

Elisabetta Andreoli is an expert on modern and contemporary architecture in Brazil, and has written papers on the subject, including her Master's dissertation. Adrian Forty is an architectural historian, Professor at the Bartlett School of Architecture, University of London. He is the author of Objects of Desire (1986), Words and Buildings (2000), and is currently writing a study of concrete and architecture. Guilherme Wisnik is an architect and associate in Metro Arquitetos Associados based in Sao Paulo. He has published various articles in specialised journals and is the author of a monograph on Lucio Costa. Roberto Conduru teaches History of Art at the Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro and at the Pontificia Universidade Catolica do Rio do Janeiro. Having gained a PhD in History, he specialises in the art and architecture of Brazil. He is the author of monographs on Vital Brazil and Willys de Castro and of several essays in specialised journals. Luiz Recaman has been an architect since 1983. He teaches Aesthetics at the Escola de Engenheria, Universidade de Sao Paulo and has published articles in various journals. Joao Masao Kamita teaches a post-graduate course on History of Art and Architecture in Brazil, Pontificia Universidade do Rio de Janeiro. Author of a book on Vilanova Artigas, he has published various essays in academic journals. Pedro Arantes has done post-graduate research on the policies of the World Bank for Latin American cities and is the author of a book on the influential 1960s practice Arquitetura Nova. Currently works for Usina, a technical consultancy in construction providing support to the Landless Movement in Brazil.

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Amazon.com: 5.0 out of 5 stars  1 review
2 of 12 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars BRAZIL'S MODERN ARCHITECTURE 16 July 2007
By Silvia Mejia Reza - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
I WAS VERY PLEASED WITH THE DELIVERY SERVICE BECAUSE AMAZON RESPONDED FAST AND IN AN ADEQUATE WAY TO MY PROBLEMS.
THE BOOK IS GREAT, IT HAS A VERY CLEAR OVERVIEW OF BRAZIL'S MODERN ARCHITECTURE WITH BEAUTIFUL PICTURES!
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