In the architecture world, it's all about the re-appreciation of brutalism. The revival has been relatively swift—the verdict ...
Brutalist architecture, known for its raw concrete, geometric forms and imposing presence, has gained a renewed interest in the modern age of social media and more recently through the film The ...
The exposed, poured-in-place “raw” concrete—béton brut—of which they were wholly or partially constructed accounts for “brutalism,” the name by which the architectural craze these buildings launched ...
It has always felt purposefully confusing, as though it were built to disorient any 70s protesters who might storm the gates.
Francis Ford Coppola’s Megalopolis and Brady Corbet’s The Brutalist are wildly different in tone and tenor, but both revolve ...
The Brutalist won a trio of Oscars last night, but it failed to say anything meaningful about architecture, writes Edwin Heathcote. The Brutalist tries hard to be an epic movie. And how often do ...
Brutalism has a bad name. That may be, in part, because it is a bad name. This polarizing architectural style of the 1950s and '60s is the subject of the the film "The Brutalist," nominated for 10 ...
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