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- Brutalist_architecture abstract "Brutalist architecture is a fragmented movement in architecture that flourished from the 1950s to the mid-1970s, descended from the modernist architectural movement of the 1930s. Brutalism became popular with government and institutional clients, with numerous examples in Britain, France, Germany, Japan, United States, Canada, Brazil, and Australia. Examples are typically massive in character (even when not large), fortresslike, with a predominance of exposed concrete construction, or in the case of the "brick brutalists" ruggedly detailed brickwork and concrete together. There is often an emphasis on graphically expressing in the external elevations and in the whole-site plan the main functions and people-flows of the buildings. Brutalism became popular for educational buildings, but was relatively rare for corporate projects. Brutalism became favoured for many government projects, high-rise housing, and shopping centres to create an architectural image that communicated strength, functionality, and frank expression of materiality. In its ruggedness and lack of concern to look comfortable or easy, Brutalism can be seen as a reaction by a younger generation to the lightness, optimism and frivolity of some 1930s and 40s architecture. In its most coherent critical appraisal (that of Reyner Banham) Brutalism was posited not as a style at all but as the expression of an atmosphere among architects of moral seriousness. "Brutalism" as an architectural critical term was not always consistently used by critics; whilst architects themselves usually avoided using it altogether. More recently, "brutalism" has become used in popular discourse to refer to buildings of the late twentieth century that are large or unpopular - as a synonym for "brutal" - making its effective use in architectural historical discourse problematic.".
- Brutalist_architecture thumbnail DHHS2_by_Matthew_Bisanz.JPG?width=300.
- Brutalist_architecture wikiPageExternalLink brutal-but-true.
- Brutalist_architecture wikiPageExternalLink 34519706.
- Brutalist_architecture wikiPageExternalLink definition.jsp?entryId=58.
- Brutalist_architecture wikiPageExternalLink new-brutalism-1992.
- Brutalist_architecture wikiPageExternalLink pg_1.
- Brutalist_architecture wikiPageExternalLink Brutalist.htm.
- Brutalist_architecture wikiPageExternalLink inner_frameset.htm.
- Brutalist_architecture wikiPageExternalLink www.thenewbrutalism.co.uk.
- Brutalist_architecture wikiPageExternalLink 107146009468437555187.
- Brutalist_architecture wikiPageID "424948".
- Brutalist_architecture wikiPageRevisionID "606640757".
- Brutalist_architecture hasPhotoCollection Brutalist_architecture.
- Brutalist_architecture subject Category:20th-century_architectural_styles.
- Brutalist_architecture subject Category:Brutalist_architecture.
- Brutalist_architecture type 20th-centuryArchitecturalStyles.
- Brutalist_architecture type Abstraction100002137.
- Brutalist_architecture type ArchitecturalStyle105841351.
- Brutalist_architecture type ArtForm105841151.
- Brutalist_architecture type Category105838765.
- Brutalist_architecture type Cognition100023271.
- Brutalist_architecture type Concept105835747.
- Brutalist_architecture type Content105809192.
- Brutalist_architecture type Idea105833840.
- Brutalist_architecture type Kind105839024.
- Brutalist_architecture type PsychologicalFeature100023100.
- Brutalist_architecture comment "Brutalist architecture is a fragmented movement in architecture that flourished from the 1950s to the mid-1970s, descended from the modernist architectural movement of the 1930s. Brutalism became popular with government and institutional clients, with numerous examples in Britain, France, Germany, Japan, United States, Canada, Brazil, and Australia.".
- Brutalist_architecture label "Arquitectura brutalista".
- Brutalist_architecture label "Arquitetura brutalista".
- Brutalist_architecture label "Brutalisme".
- Brutalist_architecture label "Brutalisme".
- Brutalist_architecture label "Brutalismo".
- Brutalist_architecture label "Brutalismus".
- Brutalist_architecture label "Brutalist architecture".
- Brutalist_architecture label "Brutalizm".
- Brutalist_architecture label "Брутализм".
- Brutalist_architecture label "عمارة وحشية".
- Brutalist_architecture label "ブルータリズム".
- Brutalist_architecture label "粗野主义".
- Brutalist_architecture sameAs Brutalismus.
- Brutalist_architecture sameAs Brutalismus.
- Brutalist_architecture sameAs Μπρουταλισμός.
- Brutalist_architecture sameAs Arquitectura_brutalista.
- Brutalist_architecture sameAs Brutalisme.
- Brutalist_architecture sameAs Brutalismo.
- Brutalist_architecture sameAs ブルータリズム.
- Brutalist_architecture sameAs Brutalisme.
- Brutalist_architecture sameAs Brutalizm.
- Brutalist_architecture sameAs Arquitetura_brutalista.
- Brutalist_architecture sameAs m.026y56.
- Brutalist_architecture sameAs Q994776.
- Brutalist_architecture sameAs Q994776.
- Brutalist_architecture sameAs Brutalist_architecture.
- Brutalist_architecture wasDerivedFrom Brutalist_architecture?oldid=606640757.
- Brutalist_architecture depiction DHHS2_by_Matthew_Bisanz.JPG.
- Brutalist_architecture isPrimaryTopicOf Brutalist_architecture.