Robert Owen
Charles Fourier
Ebenezer Howard
Bruno Taut
Frank Lloyd Wright
Frei Otto
Yona Friedman
Manifestos for changing the society. The exhibition features architectural projects and concepts in which the social and economic-political commitment to change the social condition shown by architects and theoreticians such as Robert Owen, Charles Fourier, Ebenezer Howard, Bruno Taut, Frank Lloyd Wright, Frei Otto and Yona Friedman.
That artists and writers champion improvements in political, economic and
social matters in their works is inherent to the history of art and literature. The
idea that this should have a direct effect on society had already been declared
an aim in the Age of Enlightenment; the term ‘littérature engagée’, however,
being first coined by Jean-Paul Sartre in 1947. Sartre’s demand on literature to
make the reader grasp individual freedom as a duty to change the social
condition, has subsequently been fiercely debated and criticised. The term,
however, remained – as did its pendant ‘l’art engagé’ – for all those works
“whose express aim is to exert a political and social influence and which are to
contribute to the process of social change as a sign of freedom.” Three
elements characterise dedicated literature and art: an enlightened, ethically
driven stance, an emancipatory utopia, and the notion that the work could have
an influence both within a worldly context and on its recipients.
In the exhibition and accompanying publication, the term applied to architecture
– ‘l’architecture engagée’ – is to be understood precisely in this respect.
Architectural projects and concepts will be presented in seven sections, in
which the social and economic-political commitment to change the social
condition shown by architects and theoreticians such as Robert Owen, Charles
Fourier, Ebenezer Howard, Bruno Taut, Frank Lloyd Wright, Frei Otto and Yona
Friedman, as well as the attempts to raise a new type of person in communal
housing and linear cities, will be shown with appropriate examples. The
exhibition could also provide an impetus to more thought being given to the
potential and problems linked with socio-political initiatives as well as the
present lack of such concepts.
A publication from Detail Verlag with 19 contributions will accompany the
exhibition. 35,00€ for the museum edition and 49,00€ for the booktrade edition.
Image: Renaat Braem, "Lijnstad", block of flats, 1934 © Archives d'Architecture Moderne, Brussels
Architekturmuseum der TU München:
Hilde Strobl
Architekturmuseum der TU München in the Pinakothek der Moderne
Arcisstrasse 21 | 80333 Munich
T +49 (0)89 23805-379 | F +49 (0)89 23805-310
e-mail: h.strobl@lrz.tum.de
www.architekturmuseum.de
Press Department at the Pinakothek Museums
Tine Nehler M.A.
Leitung Presse & Kommunikation | Head of Press Department
Pinakotheken im Kunstareal
Bayerische Staatsgemäldesammlungen
Kunstareal | Barer Strasse 29 | 80799 Munich
T +49 (0)89 23805-253 | F +49 (0)89 23805-125
e-mail: presse@pinakothek.de
Press preview: 13.06.2012, 11.00 a.m.
Opening:13.06.2012, 07.00 p.m.
Architekturmuseum der Technischen Universität München
Exhibition Rooms: Pinakothek der Moderne
Barerstraße 40 - 80333 München
Opening Hours:
Tuesday through Sunday, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Thursday, 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Regular Admission:
10 euros | reduced 7 euros | Sunday admission 1 euro