Ebook: Architecture’s Evil Empire? : The Triumph and Tragedy of Global Modernism
Author: Miles Glendinning
- Year: 2012
- Publisher: Reaktion Books Ltd
- Language: English
- pdf
From Los Angeles to London to Bilbao, cities around the world nowadays boast iconic buildings by celebrity ‘starchitects’ that compete for attention on the skyline and in the media. But in recent years, criticism of these ‘gestural’ structures, famous for their exaggerated forms, has been growing. Miles Glendinning’s impassioned polemic, Architecture’s Evil Empire? looks at how such cult works have fatally subverted the built environment as a whole. How a world-wide ‘empire’ of contemporary modernism emerged within the context of global capitalism’s excesses is explained in this book. Arguing against the excesses of iconic design, Glendinning advocates a modern renewal that seeks to remedy the tragically alienated state of contemporary architecture, although his is a renewal that contrasts strongly with the traditionalist visions of America’s New Urbanists or Britain’s Prince Charles. Mingling scholarship with wry humour and a genuine concern for the present situation, Architecture’s Evil Empire? will raise heated debates across the continents, for this book is essential reading for architects, planners and everyone else concerned about the built environment of now and tomorrow.
Review
"One of the effects of our brand-led and time-starved world is that whatever cultural endeavour you choose to undertake: staging an art exhibition; hosting a club night; or commissioning a building of a new skyscraper, people only seem to notice if there is a big named involved. Consequently, architecture has seen a rise in celebrity 'Starchitects.' This handful of names is often given carte blanche to dump masses of concrete and steel in conceptual yet dysfunctional heaps around the world with scant regard for the cultural mores of the folk who live there. The trend for such gestural constructs is finally and rightly challenged here in this wry and passionate polemic addressing the state of contemporary architecture. An unsettling book for some, but of interest to all."
(Bookseller)
"Engrossing . . . Glendinning's polemic argues that the 'spectacularisation' of architecture creates alienated places and people. Late 20th-century modernist architecture's failure to give form to a humane socio-industrial revolution collapsed in the 1980s and 1990s into a veneration of inherently capitalist design geniuses. Their arbitrarily flamboyant buildings have little social or historical integrity. Glendinning marshals his arguments deftly and his quoted material burns bright . . . admirable."–*Independent *
(Independent)
"In Architecture’s Evil Empire?, Glendinning is . . . concerned with what has been done in the name of regeneration. But, rather than looking at generic housing and malls, he concerns himself with the recent phenomenon of civic “boosterism”, by which towns and cities draw attention to themselves through look-at-me cultural buildings. The emergence of the “starchitect” has turned traditionally socially conscious modernism down the blind alley of personal expression. Glendinning traces the problems from that proto-icon the Sydney Opera House, through Frank Gehry’s Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, and onward."
(Edwin Heathcote Financial Times)
“Miles Glendinning’s book hits the spot . . . like all effective polemics this one turns swift and stylish, and comes to a positive conclusion: rebuild your cities slowly and carefully; integrate into them what was good about what was there before; remember that buildings are supposed to dignify people; shut up and stop showing off.”
(Architecture Today)
“Glendinning marshals his arguments deftly and his quoted material burns bright . . . It’s not architectural icons that Glendinning fears most, but the hidden iceberg of decadent causes and effects on which they perch.”
(Jay Merrick Sunday Tribune (Ireland))
About the Author
Miles Glendinning a reader in the School of Architecture at the Edinburgh College of Art and director of the Scottish Centre for Conservation Studies. He is the author and co-author of many books, including Tower Block: Modern Public Housing in England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, Clone City: Crisis and Renewal in Contemporary Scottish Architecture, The Last Icons and Modern Architect: The Life and Times of Robert Matthew.
Review
"One of the effects of our brand-led and time-starved world is that whatever cultural endeavour you choose to undertake: staging an art exhibition; hosting a club night; or commissioning a building of a new skyscraper, people only seem to notice if there is a big named involved. Consequently, architecture has seen a rise in celebrity 'Starchitects.' This handful of names is often given carte blanche to dump masses of concrete and steel in conceptual yet dysfunctional heaps around the world with scant regard for the cultural mores of the folk who live there. The trend for such gestural constructs is finally and rightly challenged here in this wry and passionate polemic addressing the state of contemporary architecture. An unsettling book for some, but of interest to all."
(Bookseller)
"Engrossing . . . Glendinning's polemic argues that the 'spectacularisation' of architecture creates alienated places and people. Late 20th-century modernist architecture's failure to give form to a humane socio-industrial revolution collapsed in the 1980s and 1990s into a veneration of inherently capitalist design geniuses. Their arbitrarily flamboyant buildings have little social or historical integrity. Glendinning marshals his arguments deftly and his quoted material burns bright . . . admirable."–*Independent *
(Independent)
"In Architecture’s Evil Empire?, Glendinning is . . . concerned with what has been done in the name of regeneration. But, rather than looking at generic housing and malls, he concerns himself with the recent phenomenon of civic “boosterism”, by which towns and cities draw attention to themselves through look-at-me cultural buildings. The emergence of the “starchitect” has turned traditionally socially conscious modernism down the blind alley of personal expression. Glendinning traces the problems from that proto-icon the Sydney Opera House, through Frank Gehry’s Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, and onward."
(Edwin Heathcote Financial Times)
“Miles Glendinning’s book hits the spot . . . like all effective polemics this one turns swift and stylish, and comes to a positive conclusion: rebuild your cities slowly and carefully; integrate into them what was good about what was there before; remember that buildings are supposed to dignify people; shut up and stop showing off.”
(Architecture Today)
“Glendinning marshals his arguments deftly and his quoted material burns bright . . . It’s not architectural icons that Glendinning fears most, but the hidden iceberg of decadent causes and effects on which they perch.”
(Jay Merrick Sunday Tribune (Ireland))
About the Author
Miles Glendinning a reader in the School of Architecture at the Edinburgh College of Art and director of the Scottish Centre for Conservation Studies. He is the author and co-author of many books, including Tower Block: Modern Public Housing in England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, Clone City: Crisis and Renewal in Contemporary Scottish Architecture, The Last Icons and Modern Architect: The Life and Times of Robert Matthew.
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