


AV Monografias 180 LINA BO BARDI
15.99€
AV Monografias 180 LINA BO BARDI
Read this magazine on iPhone, iPad, Android tablets and desktop computers / Lee esta revista en dispositivos iOS, Android y ordenadores de sobremesa
ArchPAPERS Digital books and magazines on Architecture – Revistas y Libros Digitales de Arquitectura
INDEX / INDICE
AV Monografias 180 LINA BO BARDI



Building the Everyday




A Different Path




















Product Description
AV Monografias 180 LINA BO BARDI
The centenary of Lina Bo Bardi has rekindled the fervor for her figure. The critic Rowan Moore considers the Italian-Brazilian “the most underrated architect of the twentieth century”; however, she who Martin Filler describes as “the Anna Magnani of architecture” is now enjoying an extraordinary wave of acclaim through publications and exhibitions. Her death in 1992 gave rise to a monograph and exhibition, organized the following year by the Institute dedicated to her memory; but until the PhD thesis of Olivia de Oliveira in 2006 there is a parenthesis of silence that has been broken by the approach of her centenary, with the show in the Venice Biennale of 2010 curated by Kazuyo Sejima, the publication of her writings by the AA in 2012, the monograph by Zeuler R. Lima in 2013, and the Munich exhibition organized by Andres Lepik in 2014-2015, with a catalog featuring essays by prominent experts – all these initiatives throw light on the rich personality of a mythical figure.
Her friend Valentino Bompiani called her ‘la dea stanca,’ but this ‘tired goddess’ described herself (on the occasion of her first exhibition, held in 1989 in São Paulo) as “Stalinist and anti-feminist,” honoring her political convictions and the fact that in Brazil she had never felt discriminated as a woman. Before settling there in 1946, Lina Bo had studied in Rome under traditionalist architects like Giovannoni and fascists like Piacentini, and after graduating in 1939 she was part of the Milan circle of Gio Ponti, the architect, designer, and Domus editor who at the time was close to Mussolini, as was her future husband, the journalist and dealer Pietro Maria Bardi, so her alignment with the Communist Party can only be explained by her radical independence. In Brazil this freedom distanced her from Costa and Niemeyer, criticizing Brasilia and choosing a creative path that openly deviated from the tropical modernity sanctioned by the MoMA in the 1943 show ‘Brazil Builds.’
Thus her Casa de Vidrio of 1951, closer to the Case Study Houses than to the canonical glass houses of Mies or Johnson, and whose added conventional wing has been compared by Barry Bergdoll to the hybrids of modern and vernacular of another expatriate in São Paulo, Bernard Rudofsky; thus her MASP of 1957-1968, in tune with Vilanova Artigas or the younger Mendes da Rocha, her most ‘Paulist’ work in its structural daring, revolutionary exhibition space, and generous creation of a public place; and thus finally her finest work, the SESC Pompéia of 1977-1986, an obsolete factory of dramatic industrial beauty, which she chose not to demolish, transforming its spaces into a civic center that fuses culture with everyday life. While the house, when visited, gives less than it promises, and the MASP exactly what one could hope for, the SESC experience is so fertile and moving as to surpass all expectations, and explains the present fascination with Achillina di Enrico Bo, whom the world by now knows simply as Lina.
Luis Fernández-Galiano
‘La dea stanca’ The Tired Goddess
Construir lo cotidiano Building the Everyday
Zeuler R. Lima
Comprometida con la vida An Architect Committed to Life
Renato Anelli
Del diseño a la artesanía From Design to Crafts
Olivia de Oliveira
La dimensión simbólica The Symbolic Dimension
Guilherme Wisnik
Un legado antropológico An Anthropological Legacy
Un camino divergente A Different Path
Casa de Vidrio, 1951, São Paulo (Brasil)
Glass House, 1951, São Paulo (Brazil)
Casas económicas, 1951
Affordable Housing, 1951
Museo en la orilla del océano, 1951, São Vicente (Brasil)
Museum on the Seashore, 1951, São Vicente (Brazil)
Museo de Arte de São Paulo, 1957-1968, São Paulo (Brasil)
Museum of Art of São Paulo, 1957-1968, São Paulo (Brazil)
Casa Valéria P. Cirell, 1957-1958, São Paulo (Brasil)
Valéria P. Cirell House, 1957-1958, São Paulo (Brazil)
Casa do Chame-Chame, 1958-1964, Salvador de Bahía (Brasil)
Chame-Chame House, 1958-1964, Salvador (Brazil)
Rehabilitación del Solar do Unhão, 1959-1963, Salvador de Bahía (Brasil)
Solar do Unhão Refurbishment, 1959-1963, Salvador (Brazil)
Conjunto Itamambuca, 1965, Ubatuba (Brasil)
Itamambuca Complex, 1965, Ubatuba (Brazil)
Comunidad cooperativa Camurupim, 1975, Propriá (Brasil)
Cooperative Community Camurupim, 1975, Propriá (Brazil)
Iglesia Espírito Santo do Cerrado, 1976-1982, Uberlândia (Brasil)
Espírito Santo do Cerrado Church, 1976-1982, Uberlândia (Brazil)
Capilla Santa Maria dos Anjos, 1977, Ibiúna (Brasil)
Santa Maria dos Anjos Church, 1977, Ibiúna (Brazil)
SESC Fábrica Pompéia, 1977-1986, São Paulo (Brasil)
SESC Pompéia Factory, 1977-1986, São Paulo (Brazil)
Valle Anhangabaú Tobogã, 1981, São Paulo (Brasil)
Anhangabaú Tobogã Valley, 1981, São Paulo (Brazil)
Renovación del Teatro Oficina, 1984, São Paulo (Brasil)
Teatro Oficina Renovation, 1984, São Paulo (Brazil)
Renovación del teatro Politheama, 1985, Jundiaí (Brasil)
Politheama Theater Renovation, 1985, Jundiaí (Brazil)
Centro histórico de Salvador de Bahía, 1986, Salvador de Bahía (Brasil)
The Historic Center of Salvador, 1986, Salvador (Brazil)
Proyecto Barroquinha, 1986, Salvador de Bahía (Brasil)
Barroquinha Project, 1986, Salvador (Brazil)
Centro cultural Casa do Benin, 1987, Salvador de Bahía (Brasil)
Benin House Cultural Center, 1987, Salvador (Brazil)
Ladeira da Misericórdia, 1987-1988, Salvador de Bahía (Brasil)
Ladeira da Misericórdia, 1987-1988, Salvador (Brazil)
Nueva sede del Ayuntamiento de São Paulo, 1990-1992, São Paulo (Brasil)
New Home for the São Paulo City Hall, 1990-1992, São Paulo (Brazil)