To view prices and purchase online, please login or create an account now.



Lewerentz Fragments

Hardback

Main Details

Title Lewerentz Fragments
Authors and Contributors      Edited by Jonathan Foote
Edited by Hansjoerg Goeritz
Edited by Matthew Hall
Edited by Nathan Matteson
Physical Properties
Format:Hardback
Pages:276
Dimensions(mm): Height 224,Width 192
Category/GenreArt and design styles - from c 1960 to now
Architecture
Individual architects and architectural firms
History of architecture
ISBN/Barcode 9781638400028
Audience
General

Publishing Details

Publisher Actar Publishers
Imprint Actar Publishers
Publication Date 1 August 2021
Publication Country United States

Description

The publication Lewerentz Fragments introduces new scholarship on the architect's motivations and compiles new essays from all the major scholars on his work, for the first time in one volume presenting both historical and critical perspectives. Through new essays, recently discovered archival material, photography, and drawings, the publication Lewerentz Fragments explores the architect's body of work spanning three-quarters of the twentieth century. Comprising writings from all the major scholars on Lewerentz' work, along with several new voices, this publication offers new insight into the context surrounding this architect's work. Rather than focusing on a single thesis, the book offers a diversity of insight from multiple cultural and professional perspectives. In addition, previously unpublished translations of interviews and dialogs among the architect and his contemporaries offer a voice to the 'silent architect' altering the traditional interpretations of the work and digging past the surface of what might be considered his philosophy of building. Rather than serving as an introduction to the architect's work, this volume provides detailed fragments as a deep and diverse dive into one of the most mysterious of Scandinavia's modern masters. Contributors: Johan Celsing, Patrick Doan, Nicola Flora, Jonathan Foote, Matthew Hall, Per Iwansson, Thomas Bo Jensen, Nathan Matteson, Enrico Miglietta, Paolo Giardiello, Hansjoerg Goeritz, Magnus Gustafsson, Mariana Manner, Anne-Marie Nelson, Gennaro Postiglione, Wilfried Wang, Ola Wedebrunn With Contributions of: Archival reproductions from the Swedish Centre for Architecture and Design (ArkDes), The Stockholm stadsarkiv, and The Malmoe stadsarkiv. Historical construction photos of St Peter's Church by Carl-Hugo and Lars Gustafsson Photos of the newly constructed St Peter's Church by Ole Meyer Previously unpublished archival photographs of Lewerentz' work Translations of various archival documents and audio interviews with the architect Current photography of the architect's work from a variety of photographers Funding support: Auburn University College of Architecture, Design & Construction Aarhus School of Architecture DePaul University College of Computing and Digital Media The King Gustaf VI Adolfs fund for Swedish Culture The Peter and Birgitta Celsing Foundation The University of Tennessee College of Architecture & Design

Author Biography

Jonathan Foote, Ph.D, is an architect (MAA) and Associate Professor at Aarhus School of Architecture, Denmark. Previously, he taught at Cal Poly San Luis Obispo and Virginia Tech's Alexandria Campus (WAAC). His teaching, editorial work and research focuses on the relation between architectural drawings and materials. He has published on the drawings and workshop practices of Michelangelo Buonarroti, Francesco Borromini, and Sigurd Lewerentz. In addition to his teaching and academic work, Jonathan runs a design research studio, Atelier U: W, which partners locally and internationally on special projects in design and fabrication. Hansjoerg Goeritz, AKN, FL, BDA aoM, DWB, Intl Assoc AIA, AFAAR, is a German-American practicing architect, designer, professor, and author associated with pure and minimalist architecture, emphasizing place, space, light, and material. Trained as a mason, through master school, self-studies, traveling, and at the AA London, he is founder and principal of Hansjoerg Goeritz Studio GbR, represented in Germany and the US. He taught, lectured, critiqued, published, and exhibited widely, including Tokyo, Mendrisio, Trondheim, Berlin, Hamburg, Leipzig, Zurich, Yale, Weimar, New York, and Venice. Directing his Berlin studio, he is also a professor at the University of Tennessee and has served on a number of advisory boards and design juries. Major recognitions include the 1996 Baukunst award by the Academy of Arts Berlin, exhibiting at the 1996 Venice Biennale, the 2010 international Brick award, as a Prometheus Medalist, and as Affiliated Fellow at the American Academy in Rome. Matthew Hall. He is an Associate professor at the Auburn University College of Architecture, Design and Construction, and director of the Scandinavian Study Abroad Program. Previously he taught at the Maryland Institute College of Art and the University of Tennessee College of Architecture & Design. In addition to collaborating with Hansjoerg Goeritz Studio GbR, He is a practicing architect and founding member of the anti-disciplinary design collective Obstructures with a research interest in material culture and the inherently problematic nature of design. His research and teaching are primarily concerned with the rift between intentions and consequences. He publishes and lectures internationally on topics of architectural history, theory and criticism with a focus on post-war Scandinavian architecture. Nathan Matteson. He has been working as a designer and educator in Chicago for over two decades. Currently he is on the faculty of the School of Design at DePaul University; is a researcher with the Center for Robust Decision-making in Climate and Energy Policy at the University of Chicago; and is a founding member of the design collective Obstructures. He is a ruthlessly collaborative designer whose work merrily ignores the perceived boundaries among disciplines. In his practice he investigates the feedback loop between decision-making and design; explores strategies for numeric optimization in design contexts; and wrings its metaphorical hands over the relationships among computation, intention, materiality, and immateriality.

Reviews

"Sigurd Lewerentz (1885-1975) is one of architectural history's most revered, and most mythologized architects." --Azure Magazine