[注意] ※本書為1992年出版書籍,書籍狀況並非完美,部份書頁可能有些許泛黃書斑,可接受再下訂,謝謝 1 本店只販售全新正品,絕不賣仿冒品,請安心購買。 2 下標前可以蝦皮聊聊是否商品有現貨。 3 下單前請再次確認選購的商品款式,商品須保持全新,並於取貨後15天內提出。若經拆封、使用後導致商品缺乏完整性,恕不提供退貨服務。 [商品資訊] by Benedict Zucchi 精裝: 244頁 出版社: Butterworth Architecture (1992) 語言: 英語 ISBN-10: 0750612754 ISBN-13: 9780750612753 [商品內容] Over the past forty years, Giancarlo De Carlo has been one of the leading figures of the Italian architectural scene, remarkable both as a theorist and a practitioner. A critical survey of De Carlo's work, this book traces the evolution of his ideas and identifies the influences that have made him one of the most penetrating and prophetic architectural thinkers of our time. Preceding the Post-modernist outcry by at least twenty years, De Carlo became known in the '40s and' 50s for his uncompromising attacks on the International Style. These culminated in De Carlo's membership of Team X, the group of young delegates whose withdrawal from the Otterlo Congress in 1959 undermined the old Modernist establishment and precipitated the demise of its most famous organ, CIAM. His concern for the social and political implications of architecture emerge forcefully throughout his theoretical and built work. Understanding the social nature of context through 'participation' is, for De Carlo, a necessary complement to studies of its physical and historical nature. His interest in the historic city and his skill in 'reading' it are demonstrated eloquently by his continuing involvement with Urbino since 1958, when he began work on the town's development plan and laid the groundwork for an astonishing series of subsequent interventions. In recent years, 'reading' and 'participation' have been the focus of the International Laboratory of Architecture and Urban Design, a forum of ten international universities, founded and co-ordinated by De Carlo. In addition to running his practice, De Carlo is a Professor at the University of Genoa and editor of the quarterly review, Space and Society. With the inclusion of De Carlo's key essay, Architecture's Public (1970), as well as a wide-ranging interview and numerous excerpts from his writings, many translated for the first time into English, Benedict Zucchi's book provides a unique insight into the breadth and timeliness of De Carlo's thinking. Well illustrated with numerous drawings and photographs, this book is the first comprehensive survey of the theoretical and built work of this important architect.