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Organicism in Nineteenth-century Architecture: An Enquiry Into Its Theoretical and Philosophical Background.


This is a valuable book, because it upsets many preconceptions. Architects are accustomed to identify organicism or·gan·i·cism
n.
1. The theory that all disease is associated with structural alterations of organs.

2. The theory that the total organization of an organism, rather than the functioning of individual organs, is the principal or
 with anti-classical tendencies that emerged in the nineteenth century and flowered in the work of Wright and others in the twentieth. The author overturns these assumptions, tracing the source of organicism to the principle of mimesis mimesis /mi·me·sis/ (mi-me´sis) the simulation of one disease by another.mimet´ic

mi·me·sis
n.
1. The appearance of symptoms of a disease not actually present, often caused by hysteria.
 in classical rhetoric and poetics: to Plato's Phaedrus, the Poetics of Aristotle and Cicero's De oratore De Oratore ("On the Orator") is a discourse on rhetoric written by Cicero in 55 BC. It contains the second known description of the method of loci, a mnemonic technique (after the Rhetorica ad Herennium). . She thus locates it firmly at the core of ancient and Renaissance artistic theory, notably Alberti's concept of concinnitas. In many respects the close of the nineteenth century marked not a beginning but 'an end of the organicist tradition which had prevailed until then'.

The text is divided into two equal parts, the first devoted to the pre-nineteenth century history of this tradition: to Vitruvius and Alberti, to the undermining of Vitruvianism by Perrault, Hogarth, Burke and Laugier, and its restoration in a different guise by Goethe and Schlegel. In the second part three tendencies -- tectonic, religious and scientific -- are distinguished within nineteenth century organicism. The first is exemplified by Schinkel, the second by Deane and Woodward's Ruskin-inspired Oxford Museum, and the third by Labrouste, Semper, Viollet-le-Duc, and Root's Monadnock Building The Monadnock Building is a historic proto-skyscraper in the Loop district of downtown Chicago, Illinois. It is one of the tallest masonry load-bearing wall structures in the world,[2] however Philadelphia City Hall holds the world title.  of 1890-92.

At the very point where a conventional account of organicism might begin -- with Sullivan and the early works of Wright, Horta, Guimard and Gaudi -- the author concludes with an epilogue ep·i·logue also ep·i·log  
n.
1.
a. A short poem or speech spoken directly to the audience following the conclusion of a play.

b. The performer who delivers such a short poem or speech.

2.
 describing 'the loss of the spell' -- the replacement of Vitruvian organicism by a fundamentally different kind based on biological functionalism functionalism, in art and architecture
functionalism, in art and architecture, an aesthetic doctrine developed in the early 20th cent. out of Louis Henry Sullivan's aphorism that form ever follows function.
.

Nevertheless, she discerns a persistence of the classical tradition in Sullivan's identification of function with 'inner purpose' or essential character, and in the palazzo-like composition of his skyscrapers. Did this persistence stop there? Or did not Le Corbusier Le Corbusier (lə kôrbüzyā`), pseud. of Charles Édouard Jeanneret (shärl ādwär` zhänərā`), 1887–1965, French architect, b. La Chaux-de-Fonds, Switzerland.  too, like many Modernists, continue that tradition, both in his designs and in his concern with modular proportion and the human body as a microcosm, culminating in the Modulor?
COPYRIGHT 1994 EMAP Architecture
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1994, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Padovan, Richard
Publication:The Architectural Review
Article Type:Book Review
Date:Jul 1, 1994
Words:318
Previous Article:From Idea to Building: Issues in Architecture.
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