Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/The_New_York_Five> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 67 of
67
with 100 triples per page.
- The_New_York_Five abstract "The New York Five refers to a group of five New York City architects (Peter Eisenman, Michael Graves, Charles Gwathmey, John Hejduk and Richard Meier) whose photographed work was the subject of a CASE (Committee of Architects for the Study of the Environment) meeting at the Museum of Modern Art, organized by Arthur Drexler and Colin Rowe in 1969, and featured in the subsequent book Five Architects, published by Wittenborn in 1972, then more famously by Oxford Press in 1975.These five had a common allegiance to a pure form of architectural modernism, harking back to the work of Le Corbusier in the 1920s and 1930s, although on closer examination their work was far more individual. The grouping may have had more to do with social and academic allegiances, particularly the mentoring role of Philip Johnson.The book evoked a stinging rebuke in the May 1973 issue of Architectural Forum, a group of essays called \"Five on Five\", written by architects Romaldo Giurgola, Allan Greenberg, Charles Moore, Jaquelin T. Robertson, and Robert A. M. Stern. These five architects [Guirgola et al.], known as the \"Greys\", attacked the \"Whites\" [Eisenmann et al.] on the grounds that this pursuit of the pure modernist aesthetic resulted in unworkable buildings that were indifferent to site, indifferent to users, and divorced from daily life. These \"Grays\" were aligned with Philadelphia architect Robert Venturi and the emerging interest in vernacular architecture, New Classical Architecture and early postmodernism. In the late 1970s and early 1980s, Eisenman and Robertson were in partnership, though they designed and credited their work separately.John Hejduk, the oldest of the five, is known as a pedagogue and the visionary composer of drawings, buildings, poetry, and theoretical writings from the mid-1950s on. Charles Gwathmey is known for his prolific practice (a partnership with Robert Siegel). While Gwathmey remained true to modernist style, the purity of his work is tempered by the evolving capital realities of corporate and public commissions. Meier is similarly prolific, yet known best for a continuous refinement of the purist voyage on which they initially embarked. Meier's buildings remain truest to the modernist aesthetic and especially to a neo-Corbusian form. Eisenman, the most printed writer of the five was perhaps the one who best navigated the line between theory and practice. And along with this navigation came infamy as a critic. Eisenman is associated with Deconstructivism. Graves defected from modernism; he was the first to disavow his relationship with the others and he has worked subsequently as a post-modern architect.".
- The_New_York_Five wikiPageExternalLink movement?id=133.
- The_New_York_Five wikiPageExternalLink 584137.
- The_New_York_Five wikiPageID "1801956".
- The_New_York_Five wikiPageLength "3751".
- The_New_York_Five wikiPageOutDegree "30".
- The_New_York_Five wikiPageRevisionID "702935244".
- The_New_York_Five wikiPageWikiLink Allan_Greenberg.
- The_New_York_Five wikiPageWikiLink Architect.
- The_New_York_Five wikiPageWikiLink Architectural_Forum.
- The_New_York_Five wikiPageWikiLink Arthur_Drexler.
- The_New_York_Five wikiPageWikiLink Category:1969_introductions.
- The_New_York_Five wikiPageWikiLink Category:American_architects.
- The_New_York_Five wikiPageWikiLink Category:Articles_about_multiple_people.
- The_New_York_Five wikiPageWikiLink Category:Museum_of_Modern_Art_(New_York)_exhibitions.
- The_New_York_Five wikiPageWikiLink Charles_Gwathmey.
- The_New_York_Five wikiPageWikiLink Charles_Moore_(architect).
- The_New_York_Five wikiPageWikiLink Colin_Rowe.
- The_New_York_Five wikiPageWikiLink Deconstructivism.
- The_New_York_Five wikiPageWikiLink Jaquelin_T._Robertson.
- The_New_York_Five wikiPageWikiLink John_Hejduk.
- The_New_York_Five wikiPageWikiLink Le_Corbusier.
- The_New_York_Five wikiPageWikiLink Michael_Graves.
- The_New_York_Five wikiPageWikiLink Modernism.
- The_New_York_Five wikiPageWikiLink Museum_of_Modern_Art.
- The_New_York_Five wikiPageWikiLink New_Classical_architecture.
- The_New_York_Five wikiPageWikiLink New_York_City.
- The_New_York_Five wikiPageWikiLink Peter_Eisenman.
- The_New_York_Five wikiPageWikiLink Philadelphia.
- The_New_York_Five wikiPageWikiLink Philip_Johnson.
- The_New_York_Five wikiPageWikiLink Postmodernism.
- The_New_York_Five wikiPageWikiLink Richard_Meier.
- The_New_York_Five wikiPageWikiLink Robert_A._M._Stern.
- The_New_York_Five wikiPageWikiLink Robert_Venturi.
- The_New_York_Five wikiPageWikiLink Romaldo_Giurgola.
- The_New_York_Five wikiPageWikiLink Vernacular_architecture.
- The_New_York_Five wikiPageWikiLinkText "New York Five".
- The_New_York_Five wikiPageWikiLinkText "The New York Five".
- The_New_York_Five wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Distinguish.
- The_New_York_Five wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- The_New_York_Five subject Category:1969_introductions.
- The_New_York_Five subject Category:American_architects.
- The_New_York_Five subject Category:Articles_about_multiple_people.
- The_New_York_Five subject Category:Museum_of_Modern_Art_(New_York)_exhibitions.
- The_New_York_Five hypernym Subject.
- The_New_York_Five type AdministrativeRegion.
- The_New_York_Five type Artist.
- The_New_York_Five type Artist.
- The_New_York_Five type Thing.
- The_New_York_Five comment "The New York Five refers to a group of five New York City architects (Peter Eisenman, Michael Graves, Charles Gwathmey, John Hejduk and Richard Meier) whose photographed work was the subject of a CASE (Committee of Architects for the Study of the Environment) meeting at the Museum of Modern Art, organized by Arthur Drexler and Colin Rowe in 1969, and featured in the subsequent book Five Architects, published by Wittenborn in 1972, then more famously by Oxford Press in 1975.These five had a common allegiance to a pure form of architectural modernism, harking back to the work of Le Corbusier in the 1920s and 1930s, although on closer examination their work was far more individual. ".
- The_New_York_Five label "The New York Five".
- The_New_York_Five differentFrom Central_Park_jogger_case.
- The_New_York_Five sameAs Q544492.
- The_New_York_Five sameAs New_York_Five.
- The_New_York_Five sameAs New_York_Five.
- The_New_York_Five sameAs The_New_York_Five.
- The_New_York_Five sameAs پنج_معمار_بزرگ_نیویورک.
- The_New_York_Five sameAs New_York_Five.
- The_New_York_Five sameAs The_New_York_Five.
- The_New_York_Five sameAs החמישייה_הניו-יורקית.
- The_New_York_Five sameAs New_York_Five.
- The_New_York_Five sameAs ნიუ-იორკის_ხუთეული.
- The_New_York_Five sameAs m.05y4p_.
- The_New_York_Five sameAs New_York_Five.
- The_New_York_Five sameAs Q544492.
- The_New_York_Five wasDerivedFrom The_New_York_Five?oldid=702935244.
- The_New_York_Five isPrimaryTopicOf The_New_York_Five.