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Expressionist Architecture - Niyati Gupta - 04-17-2014

Expressionist architecture was an architectural movement that developed in Europe during the first decades of the 20th century in parallel with the expressionist visual and performing arts.


Today the meaning has to refer to architecture of any date or location that exhibits some of the qualities of the original movement such as; distortion, fragmentation or the communication of violent or overstressed emotion.
The style was characterized by an early-modernist adoption of novel materials, formal innovation, and very unusual massing, sometimes inspired by natural biomorphic forms, sometimes by the new technical possibilities offered by the mass production of brick, steel and especially glass.

Many of the most important expressionist works remaining as projects on paper, such as Bruno Taut's Alpine Architecture and Hermann Finsterlin's Formspiels.

Tendency more towards the gothic than the classical.


RE: Expressionist Architecture - Priyanka Mathur - 08-22-2014

TWA BUILDING in New York by Eero Saarinen 1956-62

[Image: twa.jpg]