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Description. The Archigram archival project made the works of seminal experimental architectural group Archigram available free online for an academic and general audience. It was a major archival work, and a new kind of digital academic archive, displaying material held in different places around the world and variously owned.
AHRC-funded online archive of the seminal architectural group Archigram. Almost 10,000 drawings, artefacts, essays etc digities and contextualised with new essays. Shortlisted for RIBA Research Awards; rated Outstanding by AHRC. Principal Investigator. Keywords: EXP (Experimental Practice) Year: 2010: Web address (URL) http://archigram ...
Archigram.net is the official website of Archigram, a visionary group of architects who imagined futuristic and experimental designs for urban living in the 1960s. Explore their projects, publications, exhibitions and archives, and learn more about their radical ideas and influence on contemporary architecture.
Creators. Colletti, M. and Cruz, M. Description. This catalogue from an exhibition in Mito, Japan, is just one of many outputs that continue to be written on that most influential of British architectural groups, Archigram – indeed, the global influence of their ideas needs no elaboration.
7 de abr. de 2023 · Archigram Archival Project. After being off-line for some time, the Archigram Archival Project is now once again available to view online via the British Library’s UK Web Archive. Design Practices. → URL. 04/07/2023.
Archigram was an avant-garde British architectural group whose unbuilt projects and media-savvy provocations "spawned the most influential architectural movement of the 1960's," according to Peter Cook, in the Princeton Architectural Press study Archigram (1999).
13 de may. de 2010 · Archigram 4, the ‘Zoom’ issue of 1964, was the key year in Archigram’s fortunes. This most brilliant of issues took more than inspiration from sci-fi comic books and Roy Lichtenstein imagery in order to present architecture as a consumable, popular item rather than the stuffy high culture that modernism had become.