David Rowan : Mass [future deleted]
Images from the life cycle of Masshouse Circus 1963 - 2004.
by David P Rowan
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About the Book
Mass: Future Deleted
'I remember Birmingham being the epitome of modernity… Birmingham was the future - in a sense it has been the future, but that bit of the future is worn out now and we need a new one'
Will Alsop, [architect]
The Ruins of the Future.
The future once seemed to belong to Birmingham, the ‘city of tomorrow’ that embraced utopian visions of modernist urban planning in the middle of the twentieth century: it bulldozed historic urban fabrics and built high-rise towers, it dedicated itself to the motor car and pressed pedestrians into subways, it championed mass production and the rational engineering of urban community. Since the 1970s, of course, Birmingham has been closely identified with the failures of the modernist project. As this urbanism became discredited so Birmingham became the British symbol of its social and aesthetic failures, a dystopian lesson in urban decline. Whether figured as utopian or dystopian, Birmingham’s transatlantic modernity (it is the most American-looking of all British cities) is characterised by its commitment to waves of creative destruction: compulsively levelling and rebuilding the urban landscape in the image of an imagined urban future.
Taken from: 'Remaking Birmingham, the Visual Culture of Urban Regeneration'
by William Kennedy [Professor of American Studies, University College, Dublin.]
'I remember Birmingham being the epitome of modernity… Birmingham was the future - in a sense it has been the future, but that bit of the future is worn out now and we need a new one'
Will Alsop, [architect]
The Ruins of the Future.
The future once seemed to belong to Birmingham, the ‘city of tomorrow’ that embraced utopian visions of modernist urban planning in the middle of the twentieth century: it bulldozed historic urban fabrics and built high-rise towers, it dedicated itself to the motor car and pressed pedestrians into subways, it championed mass production and the rational engineering of urban community. Since the 1970s, of course, Birmingham has been closely identified with the failures of the modernist project. As this urbanism became discredited so Birmingham became the British symbol of its social and aesthetic failures, a dystopian lesson in urban decline. Whether figured as utopian or dystopian, Birmingham’s transatlantic modernity (it is the most American-looking of all British cities) is characterised by its commitment to waves of creative destruction: compulsively levelling and rebuilding the urban landscape in the image of an imagined urban future.
Taken from: 'Remaking Birmingham, the Visual Culture of Urban Regeneration'
by William Kennedy [Professor of American Studies, University College, Dublin.]
Author website
Features & Details
- Primary Category: Arts & Photography Books
-
Project Option: Standard Landscape, 10×8 in, 25×20 cm
# of Pages: 42 - Publish Date: Mar 22, 2007
- Language English
- Keywords brutalist, future, architecture, modern, concrete
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About the Creator
David Rowan Visual Artist
Birmingham U.K.
contemporary visual art / cultural heritage digital / professional photography / commissions @granduniongallery