Space, Time and Architecture

Space, Time and Architecture: The Growth of a New Tradition is a book by Sigfried Giedion first published (by Harvard University Press) in 1941.[1] It is a pioneering[2] and influential standard history giving in integrated synthesis the background and cultural context of modern architecture and urban planning, set in their manifold cultural relationships "with other human activities and the similarity of methods that are in use today in architecture, construction, painting, city planning and science." [3] The book was immediately recognized for the author's "monumental and catholic curiosity which compels him to penetrate long neglected nineteenth century by-lanes and reveal to modern eyes their importance for an appreciation of the complex culture of that period and our own."[4]

The book had its genesis in the Charles Eliot Norton Lectures at Harvard University in the spring of 1938, and it was recognized from the outset as a series of related essays on seminal topics in the organization of human spaces, obtaining fresh insights, not from a panoramic survey, "but by isolating and examining certain specific events intensively, penetrating and exploring them in the manner of the close-up" as Giedion outlined his method.

References

  1. Ashley Montagu, reviewing the first edition in Isis 33.5 (March 1942), pp. 640-641, found it, in spite of omissions as a work of cultural history, "the offspring of a mind which is at once mystical and intuitive, technological and artistic".
  2. "Here was architectural history as it had never been written before," recollected Marcus Whiffen, in reviewing the fourth edition in Journal of Architectural Education 17.1 (October 1962), p. 16.
  3. Giedion, "Preface".
  4. Turpin C. Bannister, in an extended review of the first edition in The Art Bulletin 26.2 (June 1944), pp. 134-138.


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