Afterlife of Byzantine Architecture in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Century
Конференцијски прилог (Објављена верзија)
Метаподаци
Приказ свих података о документуАпстракт
Over the course of the nineteenth and twentieth century, there was a sharp discrepancy between the plenitude, diversity and importance of re-imagined and re-used Byzantine architecture and its persistently peripheral status in historiography. This paradox is especially apparent in the context of Byzantine architecture perceived as both a model for, and a precursor of, architectural modernism. A link between Byzantine and modern architecture, based on the ideas of
structural rationalism, tectonics, truthfulness and anti-naturalism, as represented in Neo-Byzantine art and architecture and elaborated by various historians - from John Ruskin and Henri Labrouste to Henry-Russell Hitchcock and Philip Johnson, Roger Fry and Clement Greenberg - is only part of an unexplored kaleidoscopic picture of Byzantium's place in the Western modernist imagination.
Кључне речи:
Modern architecture / Neo Byzantine architecture / Byzantine architecture / Architectural modernism / Architectural historiographyИзвор:
Investigating and writing architectural history : subjects, methodologies and frontiers : papers from the Third EAHN International Meeting, Torino, 2014, 2014, 1007-1008Издавач:
- Turin: Politecnico di Torino
Финансирање / пројекти:
- Српска уметност 20. века: национално и Европа (RS-177013)
Институција/група
Arhitektonski fakultetTY - CONF AU - Ignjatović, Aleksandar PY - 2014 UR - https://raf.arh.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/948 AB - Over the course of the nineteenth and twentieth century, there was a sharp discrepancy between the plenitude, diversity and importance of re-imagined and re-used Byzantine architecture and its persistently peripheral status in historiography. This paradox is especially apparent in the context of Byzantine architecture perceived as both a model for, and a precursor of, architectural modernism. A link between Byzantine and modern architecture, based on the ideas of structural rationalism, tectonics, truthfulness and anti-naturalism, as represented in Neo-Byzantine art and architecture and elaborated by various historians - from John Ruskin and Henri Labrouste to Henry-Russell Hitchcock and Philip Johnson, Roger Fry and Clement Greenberg - is only part of an unexplored kaleidoscopic picture of Byzantium's place in the Western modernist imagination. PB - Turin: Politecnico di Torino C3 - Investigating and writing architectural history : subjects, methodologies and frontiers : papers from the Third EAHN International Meeting, Torino, 2014 T1 - Afterlife of Byzantine Architecture in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Century SP - 1007 EP - 1008 UR - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_raf_948 ER -
@conference{ author = "Ignjatović, Aleksandar", year = "2014", abstract = "Over the course of the nineteenth and twentieth century, there was a sharp discrepancy between the plenitude, diversity and importance of re-imagined and re-used Byzantine architecture and its persistently peripheral status in historiography. This paradox is especially apparent in the context of Byzantine architecture perceived as both a model for, and a precursor of, architectural modernism. A link between Byzantine and modern architecture, based on the ideas of structural rationalism, tectonics, truthfulness and anti-naturalism, as represented in Neo-Byzantine art and architecture and elaborated by various historians - from John Ruskin and Henri Labrouste to Henry-Russell Hitchcock and Philip Johnson, Roger Fry and Clement Greenberg - is only part of an unexplored kaleidoscopic picture of Byzantium's place in the Western modernist imagination.", publisher = "Turin: Politecnico di Torino", journal = "Investigating and writing architectural history : subjects, methodologies and frontiers : papers from the Third EAHN International Meeting, Torino, 2014", title = "Afterlife of Byzantine Architecture in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Century", pages = "1007-1008", url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_raf_948" }
Ignjatović, A.. (2014). Afterlife of Byzantine Architecture in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Century. in Investigating and writing architectural history : subjects, methodologies and frontiers : papers from the Third EAHN International Meeting, Torino, 2014 Turin: Politecnico di Torino., 1007-1008. https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_raf_948
Ignjatović A. Afterlife of Byzantine Architecture in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Century. in Investigating and writing architectural history : subjects, methodologies and frontiers : papers from the Third EAHN International Meeting, Torino, 2014. 2014;:1007-1008. https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_raf_948 .
Ignjatović, Aleksandar, "Afterlife of Byzantine Architecture in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Century" in Investigating and writing architectural history : subjects, methodologies and frontiers : papers from the Third EAHN International Meeting, Torino, 2014 (2014):1007-1008, https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_raf_948 .
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