设计一个批判的声音:话语和维多利亚建筑学生协会(VASS), 1907-1961

P. Goad
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引用次数: 0

摘要

学生是建筑专业的必要组成部分。长期以来,他们的培训和准备一直是维护建筑业务和文化的关键,这样做可以使控制专业制度化的传统领域永久化。学生们也建立了自己的社团,通常是在他们的上级组织的鼓动下,模仿他们的组织。然而,除了充当社会纽带和发挥纪律“俱乐部”的作用外,这些协会还发展出一种批评的声音,敦促变革并注入批评:简而言之,为地方话语的框架奠定基础。本文以其出版物为主要来源材料,探讨了维多利亚建筑学生协会(VASS)的重要活动,该协会是在皇家维多利亚建筑师学会(RVIA)的主持下发展起来的。VASS从1908年开始每年出版一次,到1932年演变成Lines,然后在1939年,学生Robin Boyd和Roy Simpson扩大了VASS的出版范围,制作了经常引起争议的折叠小册子Smudges,臭名昭著地给新建筑“污点”和“花束”。1947年,VASS出版了澳大利亚第一本具有争议性的现代建筑史《维多利亚现代》,并于1952年成为有影响力的杂志《建筑与艺术》的第一家出版商。本文探讨了VASS的转变,它的主要主角,图形的作用以及社会,讽刺和批判的巧妙融合,最终框架和塑造了二战后维多利亚的建筑文化。
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Designing a Critical Voice: Discourse and the Victorian Architectural Students Society (VASS), 1907-1961
Students are a necessary part of the architecture profession. Their training and preparation have long been key to maintaining the business and culture of architecture, and in doing so perpetuating traditional territories that control the institutionalisation of a profession. Students have also created their own associations, often mirroring, and at the instigation of, their parent organizations. More often than not though, in addition to acting as social binders and playing out the role of disciplinary ‘club’, these associations have developed a critical voice, urging change and injecting critique: in short, setting the basis for the framing of a local discourse. Using its publications as primary source material, this paper explores the critical activities of the Victorian Architectural Students Society (VASS), which developed under the auspices of the Royal Victorian Institute of Architects (RVIA). VASS published its annual from 1908, which evolved by 1932 to become Lines and, then additionally in 1939, students Robin Boyd and Roy Simpson expanded VASS’s publishing remit, producing the oft-controversial fold-away pamphlet Smudges that infamously gave ‘blots’ and ‘bouquets’ to new buildings. In 1947, VASS published Victorian Modern, Australia’s first polemical history of modern architecture and in 1952, it was the first publisher of the influential journal, Architecture and Arts. This paper examines the shifting ambitions of VASS, its chief protagonists, the role of graphics and the deft blending of the social, satirical and the critical that eventually framed and shaped Victoria’s architecture culture after World War II.
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