Abstract
The 'Avant-Garde' in architecture seems a challenging subject: first, because the
term has not yet clearly defined, despite the ubiquity of its use; second, because
through that ubiquity it has become a buzz-word that is empty of precise
meaning; third, because although this use includes the history of modern
architecture, its application to this field has been largely unreflective and often
unconsidered, as this thesis demonstrates. There is ambivalence as to which
architectures are 'Avant-Garde' or should be regarded as 'Avant-Garde.'
Therefore, there is a challenge in any question such as: what is the Avant-Garde
in architecture? How can the architectural Avant-Garde be defined? What is the
concept of the Avant-Garde in architecture?
My thesis is a sociological conceptualization of the Avant-Garde in architecture. It is
based on the mapping of the use the' term 'Avant-Garde' in architectural history,
theory and criticism and its analytical tools are sociological. While it belongs to the
above fields, it is informed by art theory and history, cultural studies, and the
sociology of the professions, and includes sociological, cultural and political
analyses.
I suggest that the Avant-Garde is an Operation internal to architecture; a
mechanism that does not only describe it but formulates it, motivates it, or else,
influences our perception of it. I propose that the Avant-Garde is directed by
prominent elements of its internal domain. It includes a filtering process, a rough
selection process, and a selection process, by which one or more architectures
internal conditions - are introduced to the discipline to renew the profession
toward the desired and necessary, for the element who directs the operation,
direction (see fig. 2, appendix). The end result of the selection process is what
we commonly understand as 'Avant-Garde' architecture, e.g. Russian
Constructivism or Bauhaus.
I also propose that the Avant-Garde lies in and operates within the socio-ideological
sphere of architecture and that renewal of the architecture's internal domain is
necessary, thus the Avant-Garde is necessary, so as to make architecture respond
to each time new external conditions and so endure, as a profession, over time.
The Avant-Garde is for me an operation of renewal, a driver of difference and
change in architecture (see fig. 1, appendix).
The methodology adopted is as follows: I first introduce my analytical tools,
some key sociological concepts, and concepts from the 'Avant-Garde' discourse
(chapter 1). I then examine the filtering process and rough selection process in
architectural history: I map the usage of the term in a historiographic corpus and
arrive at the more frequently and the less frequently named 'Avant-Garde'
architectures, which become my two case studies. These are Russian
Revolutionary Architecture and Italian Rationalism (chapter 2). The third step is
to arrive, through the comparison of my case studies, at those parameters that
are crucial in being selected as 'Avant-Garde,' i.e. their 'Avantgardification' - this
occurs after 1960 when the term starts being used describing architectures (part
2). The fourth step is to examine the period of the extended 19605 when the
term starts appearing as a means of describing architectures and thus the
selection process begins (chapter 6). As a fifth step I research the selection
process in the discourse of architectural theory and criticism: I investigate in a
particular corpus of writings which architectures, by whom they are chosen as
'Avant-Garde,' and the reason why, as Well as which are the concomitant effects
of the usage of the term on architecture. In other words, beyond concentrating
on which architectures or architectural movements are 'Avant-Garde' in these
writings, I focus on the effects of this selection and denomination (chapter 7).
As a sixth step, I examine the selection process of my two case studies in
architectural theory and criticism, i.e the Avantgardification of Russian
Revolutionary Architecture and less of Italian Rationalism. I investigate when, by
whom, and the reason why the first architecture is mostly selected as 'Avant-
Garde,' as well as which are the concomitant effects on architecture (chapter 8,
see also fig. 3, appendix). As a final step I examine the Avant-Garde as a
sociological concept based on the key-concepts introduced in chapter 1
(Conclusions).
A sociological conceptualization of the Avant-Garde is important for shedding
light on issues beyond those of 'Avant-Garde' architectures. Through such a
concept of the Avant-Garde we recognize issues of the profession, issues which
are wider than questions which are directly connected to those architectures
selected as such. Looking through the 'Avant-Garde' we understand the ways by
which architecture is being renewed and Operated. By recognizing the conditions,
in which the 'Avant-Garde' architectures have been created, and the way and
time in which the term was employed to describe them, we understand the mode
in which architecture, as a discipline, functions. My thesis is a hermeneutics of
the architectural profession through the term 'Avant-Garde.'
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Qualification | Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) |
| Awarding Institution |
|
| Publication status | Accepted/In press - Apr 2014 |
| Externally published | Yes |
Bibliographical note
Physical Location: This item is held in stock at Kingston University library.Keywords
- Art and design
PhD type
- Standard route