Cold War and Architecture

Cold War and Architecture

The Competing Forces that Reshaped Austria after 1945

Architecture as part of a global struggle of differing political systems: with its transnational perspective, this book changes our view of architectural history and postwar society

 

 

Title Information

Monika Platzer. Foreword by Angelika Fitz..Translated by Elise Feiersinger and Brian Dorsey. Edited by Architekturzentrum Wien Az W

1st edition

, 2020

Paperback

344 pages, 193 color and 118 b/w illustrations

20 x 27 cm

ISBN 978-3-03860-175-3

Content

Following the liberation and subsequent occupation of Austria at the end of World War II in spring 1945 by the victorious powers Britain, France, the United States, and the Soviet Union, Vienna soon became a central stage for the quickly emerging Cold War. The struggle of differing political systems was also carried out in the field of architecture. Cold War and Architecture, published in conjunction with a major exhibition at Architekturzentrum Wien Az W, sheds new light on the building activity in postwar Austria and its main protagonists. For the first time, this book explores the lines of architectural debates of the time in the context of the global political and cultural conflict of East vs. West. With its transnational perspective, it changes our view of architectural history and postwar society.

During the ten-year occupation period, Austria experienced a transition from authoritarian government to democratic consumer society. Each of the four Allied powers established its own extensive cultural program. Architectural exhibitions became important instruments of such educational schemes with the objective of a new social order. British, American, French, and Soviet cultural policies thus served as catalysts for ideological convictions.

 

Deutsche Ausgabe

Authors & Editors

Angelika Fitz

 has been appointed director of Architekturzentrum Wien Az W in 2017. As cultural theorist and curator she develops projects at the interface of architecture, art and urbanism. In 2003 and 2005, she was commissioner for Austria’s contributions to the architecture biennial in Saõ Paulo.

Monika Platzer

 is a curator and head of permanent collection at Architekturzentrum Wien. She also lectures at Universität Wien and Technische Universität Wien and has been a visting scholar at Harvard University in 2014.