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Arch 1710 Architecture and Memory Spring 2009

Arch 1710 Architecture and Memory Spring 2009. Memorials and monuments: places of memory in the modern nation-state February 3, 2009. Architecture: art of remembering or forgetting?. questions of authorship, agency, creativity in the production and deconstruction of space.

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Arch 1710 Architecture and Memory Spring 2009

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  1. Arch 1710 Architecture and Memory Spring 2009 Memorials and monuments: places of memory in the modern nation-state February 3, 2009

  2. Architecture: art of remembering or forgetting? questions of authorship, agency, creativity in the production and deconstruction of space

  3. MOVE: Police bombing of a West Philadelphia neighborhood, May 13, 1985 unresolved memories, open wound, vulnerable to oblivion

  4. 6221 Osage Avenue From Private to Public and back Dwelling Vernacular architecture of Philadelphia Row Houses Porch Life and socialization Semi-public space with the construction of platform of activism Performance Fortification and the arming of the MOVE Making of a Bunker/Shelter Reconstruction with porch life and possibilities of social life avoided/banned Continued Occupation of 6221 Osage Ave by police Standoff with Philadelphia Police Bombing/Destruction

  5. the idea of the contemporary monument: product of modernity? Philadelphia Vietnam Veterans Memorial Lenin's Mausoleum in Red Square, Moscow

  6. monument, n. A statue, building, or other structure erected to commemorate a famous or notable person or event. Something that by its survival commemorates and distinguishes a person, action, period, event, etc.; something that serves as a memorial. [< classical Latin monumentum, monimentumcommemorative statue or building, tomb, reminder, written record, literary work < From: monereto remind + Compare Anglo-Norman monument tomb, Old French, Middle French, French monument (end of the 10th cent. in sense ‘tomb’, also in Old French as moniment; late 14th cent. in general sense ‘anything that preserves a memory of something’, 17th cent. in sense ‘lasting work of literature, science or art’, 18th cent. denoting edifices which are imposing by virtue of their grandeur or antiquity), Spanish monumento (1207), Portuguese monumento (a1284), Italian monumento (1292).   With sense 1, compare Welsh mynwent (< classical Latin monumentum) graveyard. With the phrase monuments of letters (see sense 3b), compare classical Latin monumenta litterarum. With sense 4d, compare earlier use of French monument of a work of literature (see above), and also use of classical Latin monumentum in Horace Odes 3.30.1, where the poet compares his literary work to a bronze monument.] Oxford English Dictionary

  7. Alois Reigl The first Conservator General of monuments in the Austro-Hungarian Empire He wrote: “Monuments in the sense of this law are... works of the human hand since whose inception at least sixty years have passed.” (1903)

  8. Revolutions of 1848 across Europe

  9. Chartist meeting on Kennington Common in 1848.

  10. Modernity and the urban space Ringstraße in Vienna, in 1872

  11. Ringstrasse and the Parliament

  12. "la forme d'une ville Change plus vite, hélas! que le coeur d'un mortel“ Baudelaire Ringstraße

  13. Baron Hausmann and his Boulevards, Paris (Project 1852-1870)

  14. Historical value and architectural conservation Reigl’s intentional and unintentional monuments

  15. Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe, Berlin (2003-2005) Peter Eisenman

  16. Jochen Gerz, Monument against fascism October 10, 1986-November 10, 1993 Column of galvanized steel with a lead coating, 1200 x 100 x 100 cm, weight ca. 7 t., underground shaft with viewing window, depth 14 m, concrete footing, 2 steel styluses for signing the surface, text panel. Site: Hamburg-Harburg, Harburger Ring at the corner of Hölertwiete/Sand, Harburg-Rathaus S-line train station.

  17. Nation state and its monuments Ataturk’s mausoleum in Ankara- Anitkabir (1953)

  18. Reliefs from Anitkabir: Narration of a modernist utopia

  19. VIDEO: Performing the State Military ceremony at Ataturk's Mausoleum in Ankara.

  20. The Swords of Qādisīyah, also called the Hands of Victory, Baghdad (1989)

  21. In February 2007, it was reported that the new Iraqi government had organized the Committee for Removing Symbols of the Saddam Era and that the Hands of Victory monument had begun to be dismantled. The demolition of the Hands of Victory began on Tuesday, February 20th, 2007. At that time, 10-foot chunks had been cut out of the bronze monument. Numerous Iraqi bystanders and coalition troops were seen taking Iranian helmets and bits of the monument away as souvenirs. The decision to remove the monument, made by Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, was challenged by U.S. Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad, who blocked the demolition on February 21st. As of February 24th the demolition has been postponed. Wikipedia

  22. Monument as site-specific art: Mount Rushmore National Memorial Keystone, South Dakota (1927-1941) Originally known to the Lakota Sioux as Six Grandfathers, the mountain was renamed after Charles E. Rushmore, a prominent New York lawyer, during an expedition in 1885. The site was seized from the Lakota tribe after the Great Sioux War of 1876-77.

  23. Recycling Lenin As the Soviet Empire fractured, symbols of the Party were dismantled. Huge statues of Lenin and Stalin were toppled, alternately grieved or abused by onlookers, then trucked away to be abandoned in fields or other remote spots,

  24. Modern architecture died in St Louis, Missouri on July 15, 1972 at 3:32 pm. Pruitt-Igoe urban housing project demolished at the request of its inhabitants... Pruitt-Igoe was constructed according to the most progressive ideals of CIAM (Congress of International Modern Architects) and had won a design award from the American Institute of Architects in 1951.

  25. Spontaneous memorial

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