- Kenneth Frampton
Kenneth Frampton (born 1930,
Woking ,UK ), is a British architect, critic, historian and the Ware Professor of Architecture at the Graduate School of Architecture, Planning, and Preservation atColumbia University ,New York .Frampton studied architecture at
Guildford School of Art and theArchitectural Association School of Architecture, London. Subsequently he worked in Israel, withMiddlesex County Council andDouglas Stephen and Partners (1961-66), during which time he was also a visiting tutor at theRoyal College of Art (1961-64), tutor at the Architectural Association (1961-63) and Technical Editor of the journalArchitectural Design (AD) (1962-65).Frampton has also taught at
Princeton University (1966-71) and theBartlett School of Architecture , London, (1980). He has been a member of the faculty at Columbia University since 1972, and that same year he became a fellow of theInstitute for Architecture and Urban Studies in New York -- (whose members also includedPeter Eisenman ,Manfredo Tafuri andRem Koolhaas ) -- and a co-founding editor of its magazine "Oppositions".Frampton is a
permanent resident of the USA.Frampton is well known for his writing on twentieth-century architecture. His books include "Modern Architecture: A Critical History" (1980; revised 1985, 1992 and 2007) and "Studies in Tectonic Culture" (1997). Frampton achieved great prominence (and influence) in architectural education with his essay "Towards a
Critical Regionalism " (1983) — though the term had already been coined byAlexander Tzonis and Liliane Lefaivre. Also, Frampton's essay was included in a book "The Anti-Aesthetic. Essays on Postmodern Culture", edited by Hal Foster, though Frampton is critical ofpostmodernism . Frampton's own position attempts to defend a version of modernism that looks to either critical regionalism or a 'momentary' understanding of the autonomy of architectural practice in terms of its own concerns with form and tectonics which cannot be reduced to economics (whilst conversely retaining a Leftist viewpoint regarding the social responsibility of architecture).In 2002 a collection of Frampton's writings over a period of 35 years was collated and published under the title "Labour, Work and Architecture".
In 2006, he wrote the introduction to the book of Flemish architect Georges Baines.
Select list of Frampton's writings
*"Studies in Tectonic Culture: The Poetics of Construction in Nineteenth and Twentieth Century Architecture". MIT Press, Cambridge, Mass., 2001.
*"Modern Architecture: A Critical History (World of Art)", Thames & Hudson, London, Fourth edition (2007).
*"Le Corbusier (World of Art)". Thames & Hudson, London, 2001.
*"Labour, Work and Architecture". Phaidon Press, London, 2002.
*"The Evolution of 20th-Century Architecture: A Synoptic Account." Springer, New York, 2006.
* FRAMPTON K., STRAUVEN F., GÜBLER J. & VERPOEST L., "Georges Baines", Ludion, Gent, 2006.External links
* [http://jbwphoto.com/Editorial2.cfm Within this slide show are pictures of Kenneth Frampton (last slide)]
* [http://www.corringham.eu Corringham] Extensive detail about Frampton's design in Bayswater, London
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