Product Details
Contemporary World Architecture

Contemporary World Architecture
By Hugh Pearman

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Product Description

This work presents a comprehensive survey of international architecture at the end of the century and offers a critical study of the social, cultural and political changes that are shaping the built environment today. Continual advances in science and technology, shifting demographics and greater global communications constantly transform lifestyles and business practices, and prompt a perpetual reinterpretation of architectural ideology and building types. The book is divided into 12 chapters, each organized typologically into building functions - visual arts, performance, religion, consumerism, living, workplace, learning, industry, sport, tourism, transport, civic realm and megastructures. It presents over 300 recent public and private buildings, from housing and work environments to sports and leisure facilities, by many of the world's key protagonists, and examines the evolution of new architectural solutions from the late 60s to the end of the century and beyond. Biographical details of the major architects featured are also included.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #591425 in Books
  • Published on: 2002-02
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 512 pages

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.co.uk Review
Hugh Pearman's Contemporary World Architecture is a remarkable work that gives new meaning to the term magnum opus. Its sheer bulk and scope are staggering: Weighing about seven pounds and with 512 large pages, it boasts approximately 1200 illustrations (predominantly in colour) depicting 660 buildings around the world. It's a 13-course visual feast showcasing the most interesting, dramatic, graceful, inventive, subtle and significant constructions of the late 20th century. But size and looks aren't everything. This book also has brains, it organises the material by broad building types to allow readers to make logical comparisons and bring order to potential chaos. Each chapter could be considered a small monograph on different building types--structures for the visual arts, performing arts, learning, religion, retailing and restaurants, housing, white-collar work, industry, tourism and entertainment, transportation and sports, as well as skyscrapers and public buildings and spaces.

It's a near-impossible task, but Pearman endeavours to say something structured and intelligent about each of those many buildings, and place them in some societal or physical context. He doesn't shy from strong opinions, declaring that Frank Gehry's Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao "instantly became the single most famous building in the world when it opened" and calling it the "most evocative architectural image" of our time.

Many of the photos are frustratingly small given the complexity of their content, but remedying that would obviously have created an even larger, more costly volume. As it is, Pearman's book is essential reading for students, practitioners, clients, or anyone else seriously interested in the architecture of our time. --John Pastier

About the Author
Hugh Pearman is a London-based writer, broadcaster and lecturer. Architecture and design critic of The Sunday Times, London, since 1986, he contributes to numerous other newspapers, magazines and periodicals in Europe and America. With The Sunday Times he has instigated and helped judge two annual award schemes for architecture: the Building of the Year Award, with the Royal Fine Art Commission, 1989-95, and the Stirling Prize, with the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA), since 1996. He was a founder member of the Architectural Advisory Panel of the Arts Council of Great Britain (1992-5). He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts and the Royal Society of British Sculptors, an Honorary Fellow of the RIBA and Chairman of the Art for Architecture initiative at the Royal Society of Arts. He curated the 1998-2000 British Council international touring exhibition of Millennium projects, 12 for 2000, and is the author of Equilibrium: the work of Nicholas Grimshaw and Partners, published by Phaidon Press. Author's Residence: Islington, London