Wolkenbügel: El Lissitzky as Architect
After achieving international acclaim as a painter and designer, El Lissitzky set out in 1924 to convince the worldand himselfthat he was also an architect. He did this with a project for a horizontal skyscraper, which he gave an obscure and untranslatable name: Wolkenbügel. Eight of these buildings, perched atop slender pillars, were intended to stand at major intersections along Moscows Boulevard Ring, integrating the flow of tramlines, subways, and elevators. In Wolkenbügel, Richard Anderson explores Lissitzkys translation of visual and textual media into spatial ideas and offers an in-depth study of the surviving drawings and archival artifacts related to Lissitzky’s most complex architectural proposal.
This book offers a new and definitive account of how Lissitzky expanded the conceptual and representational tools available to the modern architect by drawing on many sourcesincluding photography, typography, exhibition design, and even the elementary forms of the alphabetto create the Wolkenbügel. Anderson shows how the production and reception of a paper project served to link key ideas and relationships that animated the worlds of art and architecture, offering a new view on received histories of the interwar avant-gardes. By attending to Lissitzkys singular architectural project, Anderson reveals the dynamics of internationality in the constitution of modern architectural culture in Europe.
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