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Book

Hans Hollein and Postmodernism

Book

Hans Hollein and Postmodernism

DOI link for Hans Hollein and Postmodernism

Hans Hollein and Postmodernism book

Art and architecture in Austria, 1958–1985

Hans Hollein and Postmodernism

DOI link for Hans Hollein and Postmodernism

Hans Hollein and Postmodernism book

Art and architecture in Austria, 1958–1985
ByEva Branscome
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2018
eBook Published 30 April 2016
Pub. Location London
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315586168
Pages 260
eBook ISBN 9781315586168
Subjects Arts, Built Environment, Humanities
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Branscome, E. (2018). Hans Hollein and Postmodernism: Art and architecture in Austria, 1958–1985 (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315586168

ABSTRACT

Set within the broader context of post-war Austria and the re-education initiatives set up by the Allied forces, particularly the US, this book investigates the art and architecture scene in Vienna to ask how this can inform our broader understanding of architectural Postmodernism.

The book focuses on the outputs of the Austrian artist and architect, Hans Hollein, and on his appropriation as a Postmodernist figure. In Vienna, the circles of radical art and architecture were not distinct, and Hollein’s claim that ‘Everything is Architecture’ was symptomatic of this intermixing of creative practices. Austria's proximity to the so-called ‘Iron Curtain’ and its post-war history of four-power occupation gave a heightened sense of menace that emerged strongly in Viennese art in the Cold War era. Seen as a collective entity, Hans Hollein’s works across architecture, art, writing, exhibition design and publishing clearly require a more diverse, complex and culturally nuanced account of architectural Postmodernism than that offered by critics at the time.

Across the five chapters, Hollein's outputs are viewed not as individual projects, but as symptomatic of Austria's attempts to come to terms with its Nazi past and to establish a post-war identity.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

chapter |23 pages

Introduction

ByEva Branscome

chapter 1|53 pages

The project Postmodernism and its midwives

ByEva Branscome

chapter 2|27 pages

Setting the scene

ByEva Branscome

chapter 3|33 pages

On an American stage

ByEva Branscome

chapter 4|52 pages

The Austrian avant-garde in Vienna

ByMonsignore Mauer, Galerie St. Stephan

chapter 5|30 pages

Bau or to build a magazine

Hollein’s architecture as media
ByEva Branscome

chapter 6|11 pages

Conclusion

ByEva Branscome
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