The Lost Cause of British Constructionism: A Two-Act Tragedy

This essay reflects on the demise of British constructionism. Constructionism had emerged in the 1950s, developing a socially engaged art closely aligned with post-war architecture. Its moment was not to last however, and, as discourses changed in the 1960s and 1970s, constructionism was marginalise...

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Main Author: Sam Gathercole
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Yale University 2020-11-01
Series:British Art Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.britishartstudies.ac.uk/issues/issue-index/issue-18/the-lost-cause-of-british-constructionism/
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spelling doaj-a83632b7245447a4a99c9387cc988ba22020-11-30T14:20:09ZengYale UniversityBritish Art Studies2058-54622020-11-011810.17658/issn.2058-5462/issue-18/sgathercoleThe Lost Cause of British Constructionism: A Two-Act TragedySam Gathercole0University of the Arts LondonThis essay reflects on the demise of British constructionism. Constructionism had emerged in the 1950s, developing a socially engaged art closely aligned with post-war architecture. Its moment was not to last however, and, as discourses changed in the 1960s and 1970s, constructionism was marginalised. This essay traces social and economic shifts, but it is the changing cultural discourses—particularly those associated with critical art—that are the primary concern. This essay focuses on two case studies: one, the constructionist involvement in the Sixth Congress of the International Union of Architects in London in 1961; the other, Victor Pasmore’s work in Peterlee New Town (1955–1977). Both cases form the background for celebrated cultural interventions, by Gustav Metzger and Stuart Brisley respectively. Considered on constructionist terms and in relation to the conflicts apparent in relation to emergent critical practices, these two case studies shape an understanding of constructionism’s falling out of favour.https://www.britishartstudies.ac.uk/issues/issue-index/issue-18/the-lost-cause-of-british-constructionism/constructionismpost-war architecturebrutalismvictori pasmoregustav metzger
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
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author Sam Gathercole
spellingShingle Sam Gathercole
The Lost Cause of British Constructionism: A Two-Act Tragedy
British Art Studies
constructionism
post-war architecture
brutalism
victori pasmore
gustav metzger
author_facet Sam Gathercole
author_sort Sam Gathercole
title The Lost Cause of British Constructionism: A Two-Act Tragedy
title_short The Lost Cause of British Constructionism: A Two-Act Tragedy
title_full The Lost Cause of British Constructionism: A Two-Act Tragedy
title_fullStr The Lost Cause of British Constructionism: A Two-Act Tragedy
title_full_unstemmed The Lost Cause of British Constructionism: A Two-Act Tragedy
title_sort lost cause of british constructionism: a two-act tragedy
publisher Yale University
series British Art Studies
issn 2058-5462
publishDate 2020-11-01
description This essay reflects on the demise of British constructionism. Constructionism had emerged in the 1950s, developing a socially engaged art closely aligned with post-war architecture. Its moment was not to last however, and, as discourses changed in the 1960s and 1970s, constructionism was marginalised. This essay traces social and economic shifts, but it is the changing cultural discourses—particularly those associated with critical art—that are the primary concern. This essay focuses on two case studies: one, the constructionist involvement in the Sixth Congress of the International Union of Architects in London in 1961; the other, Victor Pasmore’s work in Peterlee New Town (1955–1977). Both cases form the background for celebrated cultural interventions, by Gustav Metzger and Stuart Brisley respectively. Considered on constructionist terms and in relation to the conflicts apparent in relation to emergent critical practices, these two case studies shape an understanding of constructionism’s falling out of favour.
topic constructionism
post-war architecture
brutalism
victori pasmore
gustav metzger
url https://www.britishartstudies.ac.uk/issues/issue-index/issue-18/the-lost-cause-of-british-constructionism/
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