Navigating a quiet revolution: Portugal's current generation of architects are inspired latter-day navigators and explorers of a shrinking world.Poised on the western periphery of Europe, Portugal has always been on the edge, looking outwards. Since its foundation in the twelfth century, the country's history has been marked by cycles of invasion, occupation exploration, emigration emigration: see immigration; migration. and return. Hemmed in between Spain, its overbearing Iberian neighbour, and the vast watery gulf of the Atlantic, Portugul has long been drawn to the enigmatic, enticing sea. The country set sail in the early fifteenth century and never looked back, its explorers and navigators opening up lucrative trade routes to Africa and India. Today, former Portuguese colonies include Brazil, Goa, Macau and Mozambique, reflecting an extraordinary geographical and cultural diversity. Portugal still has a migrant soul. In the modern era, industrialization industrialization Process of converting to a socioeconomic order in which industry is dominant. The changes that took place in Britain during the Industrial Revolution of the late 18th and 19th century led the way for the early industrializing nations of western Europe and and rural poverty fuelled mass migration to cities such as Lisbon and Oporto, swelling their populations and creating a new urban underclass. Following the Second World War, large numbers left to seek work elsewhere in Europe--Paris currently has the second largest Portuguese population after Lisbon. Economic migration is still a hard fact of Portuguese life, with successful emigres often marking their return by building a house on a plot of land (the so-called maisons de reve). Yet the corrosive effects of this dislocation are evident. Portugal's rural interior remains chronically poor and depopulated de·pop·u·late tr.v. de·pop·u·lat·ed, de·pop·u·lat·ing, de·pop·u·lates To reduce sharply the population of, as by disease, war, or forcible relocation. , with 80 per cent of the country's population occupying a narrow coastal strip between Lisbon in the south and Viano do Castelo in the north. Somewhat alarmingly, this swathe swathe 1 tr.v. swathed, swath·ing, swathes 1. To wrap or bind with or as if with bandages. 2. To enfold or constrict. n. A wrapping, binding, or bandage. of more or less continuous suburbia has become one of the most densely inhabited parts of Europe, but the rapidity, vapidity and intensity of such development is clearly not sustainable. For most of this century, Portugal's geographic isolation has been compounded by the political constraints of the Salazar dictatorship, which lasted from 1928 until the Carnation Revolution The Carnation Revolution (Portuguese: Revolução dos Cravos) was an almost bloodless, leftist, military-led coup d'état, started on April 25, 1974, in Lisbon, Portugal, that effectively changed the Portuguese regime from an of 1974. Initially, the re-establishment of democracy was a painful process, but since the 1980s. Portugal has assumed a more confident Western European demeanour demeanour or US demeanor Noun the way a person behaves [Old French de- (intensive) + mener to lead] Noun 1. , its economic and political life greatly transformed since it joined the European Community European Community: see European Union. European Community (EC) Organization formed in 1967 with the merger of the European Economic Community, European Coal and Steel Community, and European Atomic Energy Community. in 1986. In some respects, the Portuguese experience parallels that of Ireland, another Catholic Rationalist fastness on the western fringe of Europe, in which poverty and diaspora are an indelible part of national consciousness, and whose traditional economic and social structures were quietly revolutionized by massive EC investment and engagement with the wider world. Architecture is also feeling the effects of these changes, most obviously in quantitative terms, with the Portuguese profession witnessing a phenomenal growth. In 1980 there were around 1500 architects in Portugal, but this number has now risen to over 10 000, with the number of architecture schools also increasing from two to 23. Though more does not necessarily mean better, architecture is now disseminated, discussed and practised with a renewed vigour and been given wider public impetus by spectacles such as the Lisbon Expo of 1998 (AR July 1998), Oporto's stint as European City of Culture in 2001, and the sporting fiesta of Euro 2004. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Vernacular roots Historically, Portuguese architecture is firmly rooted in the vernacular, with craft-based, artisanal origins and a limited range of forms and materials. Apart from a Brazilian-style flourishing of Modernism in the 'verdant years' (1) of the 1950s, progress has been slow, and Portugal's urban landscape is not an inspiring sight, with many fine historic town centres in a dilapidated state, surrounded by chaotic peripheries interspersed with unimaginative new development. Yet within this maelstrom Maelstrom, whirlpool, Norway: see Moskenstraumen. it is possible to detect touches of refinement. Over the last 30 years, Modernism has been an essentially liberating influence, nourished by the abstraction, sensitivity and social awareness of the Oporto School positioned at a crucial geographical and philosophical distance from the state-sanctioned orthodoxy of Lisbon. The notion of what architect and curator Pedro Gadanho calls 'critical scarcity' (2) also strongly underpins the best recent Portuguese architecture. Lack of resources together with a relatively unsophisticated construction industry has forced architects to be especially inventive, epitomized by the poetically understated work of familiar pioneers such as Fernando Tavora, Alvaro Siza and Eduardo Souto de Moura Eduardo Elisio Machado Souto de Moura (born on July 25th 1952 in Porto, Portugal) is an architect. Moura currently lives and works in Porto where he has built several internationally acclaimed buildings. , who embody a resonant sense of Portuguese regional identity. Today's emerging generation is able to draw on a much wider frame of reference than was ever possible for predecessors, that typically involves studying and working abroad (notably on the 'Erasmic axis' of Rotterdam and Basel) to absorb different cultural, conceptual and technical influences. As Yehuda Safran observes, 'In Portugal today, you no longer have to be a Tavora with a Gulbenkian stipend sti·pend n. A fixed and regular payment, such as a salary for services rendered or an allowance. [Middle English stipendie, from Old French, from Latin st in hand, to travel abroad and enter into the worldwide web of architectural discourse'. (3) Such experiences naturally help to enrich and inform, but on their return, these latter-day explorers must also fit into Portugal's still relatively small architectural milieu in which people tend to know one another, so generating a degree of professional and social pressure. Moreover, many younger architects have spent time in the offices of the masters. 'The sons have too much respect for the fathers', notes Fatima Fernandes, (4) which perhaps helps to account for the inherent conservatism that still touches much Portuguese architecture. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Finding a voice There are indications, however, that a new generation is starting to find its own voice, tempered and inflected in·flect v. in·flect·ed, in·flect·ing, in·flects v.tr. 1. To alter (the voice) in tone or pitch; modulate. 2. Grammar To alter (a word) by inflection. 3. by more exotic influences and general intellectual curiosity. Within this issue, along with work by the established master Eduardo Souto de Moura, whose Braga stadium (p42) shows a new confidence and maturity, are projects by emerging practices such as Aires Mateus, ARX Portugal, Guedes + deCampos, Promontorio Arquitectos and Antonio Portugal & Manuel Maria Reis. In all its various manifestations, their work displays a fascinating cross fertilization the fertilization of the female products of one physiological individual by the male products of another, - as the fertilization of the ovules of one plant by pollen from another. See Fertilization. - Cowper. fertilization by pollen from some other blossom. of ideas that sympathetically and realistically address the Portuguese condition. Even the Azores, a remote outpost of Portuguese territory marooned in the mid Atlantic Mid Atlantic can mean:
fer·ment n. 1. a quiet revolution of their own. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Thanks are due to the following for their help and advice in preparing this special issue: Jose Mateus, Francisco Aires Mateus, Fatima Fernandes & Michele Cannata, Luis Machado, Sandra Bastos and Hugo Mendes Domingos of the Portuguese Trade and Tourist Office tourist office n → oficina de turismo tourist office tourist n → syndicat m d'initiative tourist office tourist n in London. (1) See an essay by Ana Tostoes, 'The legacy of the verdant ver·dant adj. 1. Green with vegetation; covered with green growth. 2. Green. 3. Lacking experience or sophistication; naive. 1950s' in Portuguese Architecture-a new generation, 2G, IV 2001, p131. (2) Pedro Gadanho helped to organize the seminal Influx series of exhibitions devoted to the work of younger Portuguese architects A
(3) Influx: Recent Portuguese Architecture, Civilizacao Editora, Oporto, 2003, p14. 4 In conversation with the author. Fernandes and her partner Michele Cannata edited a major survey of recent work Contemporary Architecture in Portugal 1991-2001, Edicoes ASA Asa (ā`sə), in the Bible, king of Judah, son and successor of Abijah. He was a good king, zealous in his extirpation of idols. When Baasha of Israel took Ramah (a few miles N of Jerusalem), Asa bought the help of Benhadad of Damascus and , Oporto, 2001. An updated version is due out later this year. |
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