2. Post Modernism (neo – electic)
Postmodern architecture began
as an international style the first
examples of which are generally
cited as being from the 1950s, but
did not become a movement until
the late 1970s and continues to
influence present day.
Postmodernism, is the term used
to designate a multitude of
trends: in the arts, philosophy,
religion, technology, and many
other areas.
Royal Ontario museum,
Toronto, Canada
3. POMO is the outcome of:
•Globalisation
•Consumerism
•Commodification of knowledge
Everything served as a package to choose better.
POMO culture rejects the conventional stereotypes in favour of local and sub cultural influences.
POMO characterized by :
Eclecticism ,Historicism, Humour, Irony, Ornament, Pastiche, Wit, Regionalism, COllage
POMO urban space culture is characterized by fragmentation
• Self contained alternative
• Rediscovery of the local
4. Post - Modernism
Villa savoye AT & T Building
The return of “wit, ornament and reference”
The function and formalized shapes and spaces of the modernist style are replaced by diverse aesthetics.
Perhaps most obviously, architects rediscovered the expressive and symbolic value of architectural
elements and forms that had evolved through centuries of building which had been abandoned by the
modern style.
5. In Architecture POMO emerged out of
Disenchantment with Modernism
Urban Level : Failure to generate convincing urban development at the level of the city.
Building Level : Denial of effective communication as it failed to provide surprise and delight in architecture.
Who qualify as Post Modernist ?
Architect who
_Has evolved from modernism after having seen its inadequacies
_Opine that modernism failed to transform society
_Declared that modernism’s visual expression in the form of the international style was unappealing.
6. Two separate sets of responses can be identified
AMERICAN: Post Modernism
EUROPEAN: Rationalism
POMO Limitations
_Limited repertory of forms
_ Spatial issues remain unaddressed
_Prettification of building façade
_Reliance on Modern construction materials and techniques
7. “POSTMODERNISM”
Need Of An All New Movement -
The post modernist movement began in America around in 1960s – 1970s and then it spread to
europe and to the rest of the world.
Origins in the perceived failure of modern architecture.
Its preoccupation with functionalism and economical building meant that ornaments were gone
away with and the buildings were cloaked in a stark rational appearance.
Many felt the buildings failed to meet the human need for comfort both for body and for the eye,
that modernism did not account for the desire for beauty . The problem worsened when some already
monotonous apartment block degenerated into slums.
In response, architects sought to reintroduce ornament, color, decoration and human scale to
buildings.
Form was no longer to be defined solely by its functional requirements or minimal appearance.
8. DEBATE AMONGST MODERNIST AND POST
MODERNISTS……
Modernist architects may regard postmodern buildings as vulgar, associated with a populist
ethic. Post modern architects may regard many modern buildings as soulless and bland, overly
simplistic and abstract.
9. Characteristics postmodernism v/s modernism
Modernism is rooted in minimal and true
use of material as well as absence of
ornament.
postmodernism is a rejection of strict rules set
by the early modernist and seeks meaning and
expression in the use of building techniques,
forms, and stylistic references.
Le Corbusier, Chapel of Notre
Dame du Haut,1955
Michael Graves, Team Disney –
The Eisner Building, 1991
10. Columns came back into existence….
In Modern, the traditional column (as
a design feature) was treated as a
cylindrical pipe form, replaced by
other technological means such as
cantilevers, or masked completely by
curtain wall facades.
The revival of the column was
an aesthetic, rather than a
technological, necessity.
Phillip Johnson, the AT & T
Building (New York), 1984
12. Exteriors as a whole
Modernist high- rise building had become
monolithic.
Postmodernist building were a stock of varied
design elements for a simple vocabulary from
ground level to the top,(tapering or “wedding
cake “ design.
13. Illusionistic building techniques
Michael Graves, Portland Public Services Building,1982.
Postmodernism buildings sometimes utilize
trompe l’oeil, creating the illusion of space
or depths where none actually exist, as has
been done by painters since the Romans.
The portland Building (1980) has pillars
represented on the side of the building that
to some extent appear to be real, yet they
are not.
14. Faces in front of the movement
Robert Venturi Philip Johnson Hafiz ContractorCharles Moore
15. Robert Charles Venturi
june 25, 1925, Philadeplhia (U.S.)
Father of Post Modernism
The greatest architect of his time, picking up
elements from the past and stretching them,
and combining them in entirely new ways.
“Less is Bore”
Theorized the style
Celebration of the banal elements of the American
urban landscape:
billboards
highways
parking strips
supermarkets
16. Building Techniques
Venturi’s architecture has had world-wide influence,
beginning in the 1967s with the dissemination of the
broken-gable roof of the Vanna Venturi House and the
segmentally arched window and interrupted string
courses of Guild House.
The façade patterning demonstrated a treatment of
the vertical surfaces of building that is both decorative
and abstract, drawing from vernacular and historic
architecture while still being modern.
Other buildings
Brant house, Connecticut
Trubek & Wislock Houses, Massachussets
Piazza d’ Italia, New Orleans
Gordon Wu hall priceton
Vanna Venturi House
Constructed between (1959-1964)
17. CHARLES MOORE
Moore preferred conspicuous design features:
loud color combinations
Super graphics
stylistic collisions
the re-use of esoteric historical-design solutions
the use of non-traditional materials such as plastic,
(aluminized) PET film, platinum tiles, and neon signs
Ornament
Charles Willard Moore (October 31, 1925 – December
16, 1993) was an American architect
18. Piazza d’ italia, New Orleans
Creation of drama through bright
neon colouring contextualism
Moore’s circular piazza is based on the map of Italy,
built up diagonally from the circle’s center to its
circumference, a cascade of step like forms, making
a rough contour model of Italy’s “Boot”.
A spectacular combination of classical façade,
allegorical earth sculpture, and water.
Other works
Kresge College
Haas school of business
Sea ranch
Beverly hills civic centre
19. Philip Johnson
Born - Philip Cortelyou Johnson
July 8, 1906
Cleveland, Ohio, U.S.
Died - January 25, 2005 (aged 98)
New Canaan, Connecticut, U.S.
Alma mater - Harvard Graduate School Of Design
Awards - Pritzker Prize (1979)
AIA Gold Medal (1978)
Buildings – AT & T Building, IDS Tower, PPG Place, Crystal Cathedral
20. AT & T Building (New York), 1984
The building is a tall skyscraper which brings with it
connotations of very modern technology.
While the top section conveys elements of classical
antiquity.
Striking repetitive feature
Other works:
Lipstick building
The Crescent
Tycon centre
Gate of Europe
Chapel of St. Basil
21. Hafiz Contractor
Only architect to become a BRAND
First one to use colors in indian buildings
Creation of an architecture of fantasy
Architecture that belongs to another place
Context emerging from architect’s or client’s imagination &
not from the locale
Skin deep approach
Fascade articulation
Detail modernist interior
22. IL AND FS CORPORATE OFFICE Hiranandini gardens, Mumbai, India
Some of his other works are:
DLF Pinnacle, Gurgaon.
Beach House, Mandwa.
Vastu, Mumbai.
Konark Estate, Pune.
Hiranandani Gardens, Mumbai.
Spagetti, Navi Mumbai.
Gharkul, Navi Mumbai.