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Roger Connah
Product details
Format: Book
Pages: 284
Publisher: Reaktion Books
Date Published: Dec 2005
Stock Code: 55255
Binding: Paperback
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Description
From as early as 1900 Finland, at that time ruled by Russia, was to see in architecture a political and social vehicle. Modern architecture, with the promises it held for social change and hopes for technological progress, was to become a cultural phenomenon over the course of the twentieth century. This book explores the shape of architecture from Finlands independence in 1917 until the present day, and how the modern agenda became a blueprint to advance the nations society and define its identity.
Roger Connah assesses the work of well-known heroes of Finnish architecture such as Reima Pietila, Juh Leivisk and modern master Alvar Aalto, as well as many other less familiar figures whose contribution is little known outside Finland. He discusses developments in architecture in relation to the culture and politics of the new independent Finland, as well as parallel movements in the arts, and also surveys the early part of the century, as Finland came into its own as a new nation state. He examines the rationalised developments of the 1930s, the organic and vernacular tendencies of modern architecture, and how some of modernisms devices were combined with a particular Nordic sensibility. He also looks at the reconstruction and urbanisation of the post-war years, the use of industrial building methods and prefabricated materials, the golden age of Finnish modernism in the 1950s, and the developments thereafter. Connah also considers how architecture has been publicised in magazines, galleries and through exhibitions.
There are plenty of architectural photographs, illustrating the contention that Finland has played (and continues to play) a major role in world architecture. This is a very interesting account of Finland's culture and buildings, and is recommended.
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