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| Issue 100 I-II 2005 15
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Synopses Next Generation.
Almost a decade has gone by since the release of the issue devoted to
the architectural work of the youngest Spanish studios; the generation
that stood out in that ‘Sangre fresca’ has become a model
for that which now begins its professional activity with greater opportunities
for media promotion, but more difficulties to obtain commissions. The
generation in between, distributed all over the country, is already completing
its first works. Similar criteria as applied then – works previously unpublished
by architects under forty years –, have led to the selection of
twelve emerging careers. |
Contents Adela García-Herrera |
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| Cover Story
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Architecture
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| Views and Reviews
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Art / Culture
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| Ideological Centenaries. It has been one hundred years since the births of Albert Speer and Juan O’Gorman, respective embodiments of the yearns of German National Socialism and the communism of the Mexican Revolution. | Luis Fernández-Galiano Speer in the Shadow of Hitler Fernanda Canales The Mexico of O’Gorman |
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| Urban Phenomena. Several recent publications
analyze the unstoppable growth of cities and reflect on the consequences
of the global economy that prompts the competition between them, as well
as their ‘thematization’. |
Focho’s Cartoon Francisco Mangado Various Authors Books |
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| Recent Projects
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Technique / Style
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| To close, a reflection on how digital tools are influencing graphic representation systems nowadays. The most commonly used CAD programs are able to draw conical perspectives with great ease, which has generated a proliferation of hyperrealistic architectural views. The axonometrical perspective, by contrast, has taken over simulation games. | Products Construmat 2005 English Summary Next Generation Fernando Valderrama God’s Gaze is Axonometrical |
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| Luis
Fernández-Galiano |
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Upon reaching our issue number
one hundred, it seems more appropriate to look towards the future than
to map the lands we have already visited. Almost one decade after the
first Arquitectura Viva issue on young Spanish architects (‘Sangre
fresca’, published in 1996), and two decades after the AV project
was launched in 1985, going once again into what the last generations
draw and build spares us the risk of indulgent self-celebration, but at
the same time does not conceal a certain yearn for artificious rejuvenation
through the transfusion of the rich flow of unprecedented images that
is distilled in a swarm of young laboratories. This vital flood circulates so vigorously that it is difficult to select
two dozens of careers and works without incurring in many omissions and
arbitrary decisions, a risk that we have tried to avert here with the
double condition of geographic dispersion and of being previously unpublished
in the magazine itself. Unfortunately, this last limitation excludes many
offices which have emerged in the time passed since our first collection
of 1996, and the introductory article by Adela García-Herrera endeavors
to make up for the inevitable absences with a collage of mentions that
run through the choral panorama of Spain’s young architecture. However, the number and appeal of the projects should not conceal the
significant obstacles that must be overcome during the first stages of
liberal practice, still the mythical model of reference for schools and
magazines. Built around a romantic concept of authorship, and nurtured
by a fancy cocktail of conventional bohemian individualism and contemporary
mediatic marketing, the effort to obtain the recognition of a name or
brand demands stubborn discipline and a considerable amount of time taken
away from personal and family life, which is often and paradoxically alleviated
through teams, the younger the larger. Though graphic brilliance does not leave out constructive credibility, the nature of the competition system and the crowded panorama of the candidates to success inevitably leads new architects to the tireless pursuit of originality, essential to draw attention towards their projects, but also the source of many technical and economic risks that only public clients are able to face. This challenge to the old safety belt of continuity, made possible by the economic effervescence spurred on by the real-estate bubble, traces a future of blurred boundaries, but also one that can only be shaped by the motley crew of architects introduced here as the next generation. |
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