Quondam | 2.3 |
significant plateau in Stirling's architectural evolution |
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After 1945, almost nothing remained of the great historic cities of Germany, a tragedy compounded by postwar traffic engineering and weak attempts at "historical reconstruction" so that by the 1970s, the only thing left was regret for what had been lost. For Stirling, with his convictions about modernist urban design, and his awareness of history, the situation was ideal. His connoisseurship (modernist collector of historical allusions) became enhanced in response to the new milieu and his interest in the past, his enthusiasm for the museum as a type and its heroic origins in neoclassicism (particularly in Germany) combined with the need to make modern cities as beautiful as the old, led his architecture into transformations he himself could hardly have anticipated. |
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Stirling lives in the present, moves modestly, and advances reverently. Of course, none of this means that he avoids novelty; and he knows full well that newness is nothing more than the end product of long development from the distant past.
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Stirling's Muses Part II |
Quondam © 2007.04.07 |