The great achievement of Yugoslavia was in being able to keep collectivism and individualism in some kind of balance.-Justin McGuirk "The New Yorker"
#Concrete utopia mod#
Tells one of the most underappreciated stories of postwar architecture: the rise of avant-garde government buildings, pie-in-the-sky apartment blocks, mod beachfront resorts and even whole new cities in the southeast corner of Europe.-Jason Farago "New York Times" Highlights architecture's role in creating a common history and collective identity of a socialist state.-Sofia Lekka Angelopoulou "Designboom"
![concrete utopia concrete utopia](https://s.yimg.com/aah/artbook/toward-a-concrete-utopia-architecture-in-yugoslavia-1948-1980-93.gif)
Highlighting a significant yet thus-far understudied body of modernist architecture, whose forward-thinking contributions still resonate today.- "The Architects Newspaper" Iovine "Wall Street Journal"ĭocuments how buildings and the architects behind them contribute to the modernization and social cohering of a historically multiethnic region.-Theodossis Issaias "Metropolis"įrom housing blocks to a rural mosque, ponder marker of unity and individualism from a now-vanished postwar building culture.- "Art Newspaper" Featuring new scholarship and previously unpublished archival materials, this richly illustrated publication sheds light on key ideological concepts of Yugoslav architecture, urbanism and society by delving into the exceptional projects and key figures of the era, among them Bogdan Bogdanovic, Zoran Bojovic, Drago Galic, Janko Konstantinov, Georgi Konstantinovski, Niko Kralj, Boris Magas, Juraj Neidhardt, Joze Plecnik, Svetlana Kana Radevic, Edvard Ravnikar, Vjenceslav Richter, Milica Steric, Ivan Straus and Zlatko Ugljen.Ī manifestation of radical diversity, hybridity, and idealism that characterized the Yugoslav state iself.- "Blouin Art Info"Ībove all, the exhibition reminds us that design can be a tool of social progress.-Justin McGuirk "New Yorker"Ībundance of beautifully hung and arranged drawings, photographs, and models of striking, and in some cases downright bizarre, buildings and monuments.-Josephine Minutillo "Architectural Record"Īstonishing structures surge with unchecked emotions of agony, sacrifice, loss and rememberance.-Julie V. Published in conjunction with a major exhibition on the architectural production of Yugoslavia between 19, this is the first publication to showcase an understudied but important body of modernist architecture. This remarkable body of work has sparked recurrent international interest, yet a rigorous interpretative study never materialized in the United States until now. By merging a variety of local traditions and contemporary international influences in the context of a unique Yugoslav brand of socialism, often described as the "Third Way," local architects produced a veritable "parallel universe" of modern architecture during the 45 years of the country's existence.
![concrete utopia concrete utopia](https://www.ignant.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/ignant-architecture-moma-toward-a-concrete-utopia-005.jpg)
As a founding nation of the Non-Aligned Movement, Yugoslavia became a major exporter of modernist architecture to Africa and the Middle East in a postcolonial world. Squeezed between the two rival Cold War blocs, Yugoslav architecture consistently adhered to a modernist trajectory. In Yugoslavia's "Third Way" architecture, Brutalism meets the fantastical