Resultado de búsqueda
20 de abr. de 2021 · Cajsa Carlson | 20 April 2021 Leave a comment. A new retrospective of postmodernist architect Aldo Rossi 's work has recently opened at Rome's MAXXI museum. Its curator Alberto Ferlenga picks ten ...
Rossi, Aldo (1931-1997) Arquitecto italiano nacido en Milán en 1931 y fallecido en su ciudad natal en 1997. Comienzó sus estudios de arquitectura en el Politécnico de su ciudad natal en 1949, y se diplomó en 1959. Durante sus años de estudiante colaboró en la revista Casabella Continuità en 1955, hasta su desaparición en 1964.
27 de feb. de 2023 · Step inside the mind of one of the most influential architects of our time, Aldo Rossi, in the captivating documentary “Bringing the Everyday to Life”. Relea...
- 1 min
- 4.1K
- Shelter: The Architecture Channel
arquilecturas post-scripts. 24 DIC. 2019. Aldo Rossi. Una vida de pensamiento analógico. Autobiografía científica. Aldo Rossi Gustavo Gili, 2019 (1981) Aldo Rossi (1931-1997) ha pasado a la historia de la arquitectura por su aportación crítica y estructuralista a una modernidad mecánica a la que él mismo llegó a considerar como ...
18 de oct. de 2023 · Aldo Rossi of Italy Elected 1990 Pritzker Architecture Prize Laureate Aldo Rossi of Milan, Italy has been selected as the 1990 Pritzker Architecture Prize Laureate. Twelve architects have been previously named over the past eleven years, six from the United States and six from other countries.
Aldo Rossi (1931-1997), an Italian architect known for having reestablished symbolism to European architecture after the 1960s. Rossi’s theory of city morphology, proposed that it was rooted in “antifascist sentiments” and influenced by politics of the Cold War. Rossi’s professional growth is outlined through a period conditioned by the ...
Aldo Rossi (born May 3, 1931, Milan, Italy—died September 4, 1997, Milan) Italian architect and theoretician who advocated the use of a limited range of building types and concern for the context in which a building is constructed. This postmodern approach, known as neorationalism, represents a reinvigoration of austere classicism.