Fusions. Les démarches symbiotiques de Marta Pan et André Wogenscky

Marta Pan, a Hungarian-born sculptor, and André Wogenscky, an architect well known for having designed some of the most successful public buildings during the 1960s and 1970s, seem to have succeeded in avoiding a situation deplored by Viollet-le-Duc. In his 1893 book De la décoration appliquée aux é...

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Main Author: Dominique Amouroux
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Ministère de la Culture et de la Communication 2017-07-01
Series:In Situ : Revue de Patrimoines
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/insitu/15046
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spelling doaj-b952c998c6aa46c19797b692544662022020-11-25T00:05:00ZfraMinistère de la Culture et de la CommunicationIn Situ : Revue de Patrimoines1630-73052017-07-013210.4000/insitu.15046Fusions. Les démarches symbiotiques de Marta Pan et André WogensckyDominique AmourouxMarta Pan, a Hungarian-born sculptor, and André Wogenscky, an architect well known for having designed some of the most successful public buildings during the 1960s and 1970s, seem to have succeeded in avoiding a situation deplored by Viollet-le-Duc. In his 1893 book De la décoration appliquée aux édifices, he deplored ‘The painter thought of his painting without worrying about what surrounded it. The sculptor had no other idea than to attract attention to his work, even if he roughly elbowed the architect and effaced the painter’. This situation still prevailed in the 1960s when the integration of works of art into public buildings – the famous 1% – is often called ‘decoration’ although the programme aimed at a convergence of disciplines. Marta Pan and André Wogenscky went further then in the fusion of their creations, merging their practices thanks to their shared conviction as to the importance of space for man, and the indispensable tension in space affirming all the qualities that the designer intends to give it. From 1952 to the early 2000s, their constructions and interventions in urban spaces illustrate this practice which was carefully thought through.http://journals.openedition.org/insitu/15046WogensckyMarta Panarchitecturesculptureartistic practicesmodern architecture
collection DOAJ
language fra
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dominique Amouroux
spellingShingle Dominique Amouroux
Fusions. Les démarches symbiotiques de Marta Pan et André Wogenscky
In Situ : Revue de Patrimoines
Wogenscky
Marta Pan
architecture
sculpture
artistic practices
modern architecture
author_facet Dominique Amouroux
author_sort Dominique Amouroux
title Fusions. Les démarches symbiotiques de Marta Pan et André Wogenscky
title_short Fusions. Les démarches symbiotiques de Marta Pan et André Wogenscky
title_full Fusions. Les démarches symbiotiques de Marta Pan et André Wogenscky
title_fullStr Fusions. Les démarches symbiotiques de Marta Pan et André Wogenscky
title_full_unstemmed Fusions. Les démarches symbiotiques de Marta Pan et André Wogenscky
title_sort fusions. les démarches symbiotiques de marta pan et andré wogenscky
publisher Ministère de la Culture et de la Communication
series In Situ : Revue de Patrimoines
issn 1630-7305
publishDate 2017-07-01
description Marta Pan, a Hungarian-born sculptor, and André Wogenscky, an architect well known for having designed some of the most successful public buildings during the 1960s and 1970s, seem to have succeeded in avoiding a situation deplored by Viollet-le-Duc. In his 1893 book De la décoration appliquée aux édifices, he deplored ‘The painter thought of his painting without worrying about what surrounded it. The sculptor had no other idea than to attract attention to his work, even if he roughly elbowed the architect and effaced the painter’. This situation still prevailed in the 1960s when the integration of works of art into public buildings – the famous 1% – is often called ‘decoration’ although the programme aimed at a convergence of disciplines. Marta Pan and André Wogenscky went further then in the fusion of their creations, merging their practices thanks to their shared conviction as to the importance of space for man, and the indispensable tension in space affirming all the qualities that the designer intends to give it. From 1952 to the early 2000s, their constructions and interventions in urban spaces illustrate this practice which was carefully thought through.
topic Wogenscky
Marta Pan
architecture
sculpture
artistic practices
modern architecture
url http://journals.openedition.org/insitu/15046
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