Leading art historians, architects, designers, artists, and urbanists share new perspectives on this visionary architect’s material legacy
Lina Bo Bardi (1914–1992) is renowned for her boldly modernist designs like the São Paulo Museum of Art and the culture and leisure center SESC Pompéia. An artist, architect, designer, writer, and activist, she was a tireless champion for local craft and materials. Her democratic designs were inclusive and stood as an open invitation to those typically excluded from elitist institutions, embodying an aesthetic that stood out among the modernist movement in Brazil and abroad. This collection of essays presents new perspectives on Bo Bardi from leading contemporary artists, architects, curators, and scholars. Contributors engage with the conceptual, social, and political philosophies latent in the architectural materials she chose—from her application of concrete to her implementation of nature and her reuse of vernacular materials.
Beautifully illustrated and featuring seven gatefolds, Lina Bo Bardi: Material Ideologies sheds vital new light on the ideological strategies inherent in Bo Bardi’s iconic projects and lesser-known work.
Distributed for the Princeton University School of Architecture
"The array of multidisciplinary perspectives very much helps to illuminate Bo Bardi’s life and work. . . . While the scholarship of the essays is strong throughout, the images can feel downright profound."
---Stephen "Chick" Rabourn, Texas Architect