Busbea, Larry

Topologies : the urban utopia in France, 1960-1970 / Larry Busbea - Cambridge, Mass. : MIT Press, c2007 - ix, 229 p., [12] p. of plates : ill. (some col.), maps (some col.) ; 24 cm

Includes bibliographical references (p. 193-219) and index

Amid the cultural and political ferment of 1960s France, a group of avant-garde architects, artists, writers, theorists, and critics known as "spatial urbanists" envisioned a series of urban utopias, phantom cities of a possible future. In this first study of the French avant-garde tendency known as spatial urbanism, Larry Busbea analyzes projects by artists and architects (including the most famous spatial practitioner, Yona Friedman) and explores texts by Michel Ragon, the influential founder of the Groupe Internaional d'Architecture Prospective (GIAP), Victor Vasarely, and others. Topologies maps the literal and metaphorical topologies of spatial urbanism, describing and documenting its projects and locating it within an international network of experimental architectural practice that also included the Situationist International, Archigram, the Metabolists, Architecture Principe, Superstudio, and others. -- Dust Jacket

0262026112 (hardcover : alk. paper) 9780262518109 (hbk.)

2006030110


City planning--History--France--Paris--20th century

NA9198.P2 / B87 2007

720.22
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