what’s the point of being an architect at all? That question unites two of last year’s most talked-about movies: Brady Corbet’s “The Brutalist” and Francis Ford Coppola’s ...
Brutalist architecture, known for its raw concrete, geometric forms and imposing presence, has gained a renewed interest in the modern age of social media and more recently through the film The ...
The Oscar-winning film "The Brutalist" — a fictional story about a Holocaust survivor and immigrant architect — was inspired by the abbey's church, thanks to a book written by a monk who ...
Telling the story of architect Lazlo Toth (Brody) from his days in Europe to his new life in America, “The Brutalist” sends a ...
“You don’t matter. Wear a mask, you’re all the same. Ugly architecture, Brutalist architecture.” The style, he said, “was designed to send that message, not to uplift, but to oppress.
I should be happy. It is exceedingly rare to have a major Hollywood film take architecture as its central subject, and this ...
"The Brutalist," an epic drama loosely inspired by the life and work of architect Marcel Breuer, is one of the favorites for the Oscars. But the film has drawn scorn from design experts ...
Harry Weese’s stations for Washington’s Metro subway system are vaulted spaces with coffer-like rectangular recesses meant to harmonize with Washington’s classical architecture. Not exactly what you’d ...
It’s a shame because The Brutalist has an interesting premise: It’s the story of a fictional Bauhaus-trained Hungarian-Jewish architect ... s prologue has a quote from Goethe: “None are ...