This research aims to analyse the development of a multiculturalist discourse in European post-war architecture (1950s-1960s). It focuses on the work of the Dutch architect Aldo van Eyck (1918-1999), who built his theoretical framework by merging modern architecture, pre-war avant-garde and the artistic production of non-Western cultures. The Otterlo Circles, presented by Van Eyck during the last CIAM (1959), were an attempt to synthesize a complex design methodology based on a concept of time inherited from James Joyce. After introducing the post-war architectural context of his time, we take the writings of Carola Giedion-Welcker, Van Eyck’s mentor in Zurich, as a starting point for a conceptual analysis of his essays. The three official ...
The essay published in rita_09 is a result of a research that studies Van Eyck’s house in Loenen aan...
Aldo van Eyck (1918-1999) worked for the Urban Development Department of Amster- dam from 1947 to 19...
This paper aims to look at an uncommonly critical attitude against the bureaucratic functionalism in...
This research aims to analyse the development of a multiculturalist discourse in European post-war a...
[EN] This research aims to analyse the development of a multiculturalist discourse in European post-...
El objetivo de este ensayo es analizar el desarrollo del discurso multicultural en la arquitectura e...
In 1959, on the occasion of the last CIAM conference, Dutch architect Aldo van Eyck produced the “Ot...
An extraordinary interest in the vernacular, the primitive and the popular went through post-war Eur...
Published as part of a series of studies on architecture and travel this chapter sheds new light on ...
Grounded on an experiential understanding of architecture, this research explores ways in which arch...
This thesis compares the development of the Czechoslovak and Dutch architectural avant-gardes from t...
In the 1970’s architecture turned to the social sciences in a search for legitimation outside its ow...
Aldo van Eyck design experiences engendered the development of broader architectural concepts, many ...
This paper deals with a key topic within the criticism developed on Modern Movement architecture by ...
[EN] In 1964, Aldo and Hannie van Eyck moved from Amsterdam to Loenen aan de Vecht, refurbishing an ...
The essay published in rita_09 is a result of a research that studies Van Eyck’s house in Loenen aan...
Aldo van Eyck (1918-1999) worked for the Urban Development Department of Amster- dam from 1947 to 19...
This paper aims to look at an uncommonly critical attitude against the bureaucratic functionalism in...
This research aims to analyse the development of a multiculturalist discourse in European post-war a...
[EN] This research aims to analyse the development of a multiculturalist discourse in European post-...
El objetivo de este ensayo es analizar el desarrollo del discurso multicultural en la arquitectura e...
In 1959, on the occasion of the last CIAM conference, Dutch architect Aldo van Eyck produced the “Ot...
An extraordinary interest in the vernacular, the primitive and the popular went through post-war Eur...
Published as part of a series of studies on architecture and travel this chapter sheds new light on ...
Grounded on an experiential understanding of architecture, this research explores ways in which arch...
This thesis compares the development of the Czechoslovak and Dutch architectural avant-gardes from t...
In the 1970’s architecture turned to the social sciences in a search for legitimation outside its ow...
Aldo van Eyck design experiences engendered the development of broader architectural concepts, many ...
This paper deals with a key topic within the criticism developed on Modern Movement architecture by ...
[EN] In 1964, Aldo and Hannie van Eyck moved from Amsterdam to Loenen aan de Vecht, refurbishing an ...
The essay published in rita_09 is a result of a research that studies Van Eyck’s house in Loenen aan...
Aldo van Eyck (1918-1999) worked for the Urban Development Department of Amster- dam from 1947 to 19...
This paper aims to look at an uncommonly critical attitude against the bureaucratic functionalism in...