On modern architecture, and perceptions & attitudes towards it and how those concepts have changed over time, I went to a lecture at the
CCA a couple of weeks ago, and a video is now online:
Author and critic Owen Hatherley presents and comments on a television broadcast of Open University course A305, for contemporary eyes and ears. The episode, “English Flats of the Thirties,” juxtaposes two housing schemes, one in London and one in Leeds, one public and one private, one modelled on the monumental mass housing of Red Vienna and one on the ideas of Le Corbusier. Looking at how these buildings were perceived in the 1970s, Hatherley reflects both on the changing reputation of modernist mass housing and attitudes toward working class housing and the architectural avant-garde. Why did one of the buildings become “iconic” and get preserved, while the other was demolished?
Hatherley is the author of books including Militant Modernism (2009), A Guide to the New Ruins of Great Britain (2009), and Uncommon (2011), about the pop group Pulp. He has contributed to publications including Building Design, The Guardian, Icon, Jacobin, London Review of Books, New Humanist, New Statesman, Socialist Review, and Socialist Worker.
The CCA currently has an exhibition on,
The University Is Now on Air: Broadcasting Modern Architecture, which looks at one of the courses of the British Open University project:
A305, History of Architecture and Design, 1890–1939 and they invited Hatherley to comment on an episode of the course broadcasts. If you're interested in modernist architecture and how people's concept of it have changed over time, this is worth an hour of your time.
The CCA also has broadcast from that Open University course on their youtube channel:
A305, History of Architecture and Design 1890–1939. They're quite interesting on their own, with studies of a number of modern architects and buildings. And videos from the exhibition are also online:
The University Is Now on Air / L'université à l'antenne, for anyone interested in the Open University's experiment in higher education.
Edit A few things I forgot to mention: Hatherley mentions the documentary
The Pruitt-Igoe Myth, I can't recall if I've mentioned it on this forum, but it's an absolute must-see for anyone who has opinions on public housing and modernist architecture. Hartherley also mentions that this was his first trip to Canada, and he made a brief tour of Montréal and was
fairly impressed by the Metro. He also made a side trip to my home town of Ottawa, where he was
less impressed with some of our architecture.
Edit the Second A "Freaky Architectural Stuff" tweet I forgot to mention: Hatherley found the
high-rise from David Cronenberg's Shivers (which he considers to be the best adaptation of J.G. Ballard's
High-Rise) in Montréal.