Brasilia Segment from The Shock of the New
Robert Hughes’ history of Modern Art from Cubism to Pop and the Avant-Garde The popular art history sequel to the BBC’s Civilization series, picks up at the threshold of the 20th century. It is written and presented by Robert Hughes, art critic and senior writer for Time. Hughes draws on a wealth of documentary materials from the archives of the BBC, including rare footage and interviews with noted artists. The range of major figures includes Henri Matisse, Pablo Picasso, le Corbusier, Maz Ernst, Francis Bacon and Jackson Pollock. Episode 4: Trouble in Utopia German visionary architects such as Scharoun, Finsterlin, Luckhardt, Taut planned their Wagnerian dreams with glass palaces in the Alps, as did Italians such as Sant’ Elia and Chiattone. Then, Bauhaus and the functionalist faith-Mies van der Rohe, Walter Gropius, le Corbusier, and the worldwide spread of the glass-box international style, with their concomitant social programs and delusions. The great myth of the architect as social legislator culminated in the town plans of le Corbusier, the speculations of Buckminster Fuller and came to an end in the strange wasteland of Brasilia.
@hyperseauton Yeah…blame it on the foreigners…Your history is over. Accept it.
@mrpaiva04
Brasilia is being renovated, the materials, the arrangement, lines and forms remain and Hughes critique is therefore still valid.
About Britain becoming a shithouse because of foreigners:
Get a fucking education, mate before you dial videos about modern art.
This fool should visit Brasilia today (2010) if he’s still alive. Brasilia thrives while his old country is fast becoming a shit house.
@joikeas “Nothing dates faster than people’s fantasies about the future.”
It remembers Detroit… But Brasilia is very good today.
That was a long, long time ago…