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The Sphere and the Labyrinth: Avant-Gardes and Architecture from Piranesi to the 1970's

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Offers a survey of avant-garde architecture, looks at the work of Stirling, Rossi, Gregotti, Venturi, Eisenman, Graves, Hejuk, Argest, and Gandelsonas, and discusses futurism and expressionism

382 pages, Hardcover

First published May 9, 1987

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About the author

Manfredo Tafuri

46 books25 followers
Manfredo Tafuri an Italian architect, historian, theoretician, critic and academic, was arguably the world's most important architectural historian of the second half of the 20th century.[1] He is noted for his pointed critiques of the partisan "operative criticism" of previous architectural historians and critics like Bruno Zevi and Siegfried Giedion and for challenging and overturning the idea that the Renaissance was a "golden age" as it had been characterised in the work of earlier authorities like Heinrich Wolfflin and Rudolf Wittkower.
For Tafuri, architectural history does not follow a teleological scheme in which one language succeeds another in linear sequence. Instead, it is a continuous struggle played out on critical, theoretical and ideological levels as well as through the multiple constraints placed on practice. Since this struggle continues in the present, architectural history is not a dead academic subject, but an open arena for debate. In his view, like other cultural domains, but even more so, due to the tension between its autonomous, artistic character and its technical and functional dimensions, architecture is a field defined and constituted by crisis.
During the 1970s, Tafuri published important essays in Oppositions, the journal directed by Peter Eisenman. Although he always had a strong interest in this area of research, in the last decade of his career he undertook a comprehensive reassessment of the theory and practice of Renaissance architecture, exploring its various social, intellectual and cultural contexts, while providing a broad understanding of uses of representation that shaped the entire era. His final work, Interpreting the Renaissance: Princes, Cities, Architects, published in 1992, synthesizes the history of architectural ideas and projects through discussions of the great centres of architectural innovation in Italy (Florence, Rome, and Venice), key patrons from the middle of the fifteenth century to the early sixteenth century, and crucial figures such as Leon Battista Alberti, Filippo Brunelleschi, Francesco di Giorgio, Lorenzo de' Medici, Bramante, Raphael, Baldassare Castiglione and Giulio Romano.
Tafuri held the position of chair of architectural history at the University Iuav of Venice.

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Anna.
2 reviews
January 23, 2023
Probabilmente avrei amato questo libro se lo avessi trovato per caso, perché io ho sempre amato piranesi, ma me l'ha fatto leggere quel coglione del mio professore di laboratorio e per colpa sua adesso odio piranesi. Bella merda bello ciao
Profile Image for Calmbob.
3 reviews
November 25, 2007
The book is a collection of essays, loosely ordered and connected. As a group they demolish presuppositions and self-deceptions of Modernism and Post-Modernism, for example in the Hitchcock or the Sculley lineages. The essay on Piranesi is pretty widely cited, and justly so; but it's the essay on new York skyscrapers, "The New Babylon..." that shines in its narrative of New York highrise architecture after World War I. Maybe Tafuri is not always convincing, but his ideas and explanations are at least seductive.
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