EGA (May 2014)

Graphic documents concerning the academic curriculum of architecture students in the spanish postwar period (1940-1953)

  • Justo Oliva Meyer

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4995/ega.2014.2180
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 23
pp. 92 – 103

Abstract

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In this paper we address the academic curriculum in architecture during the postwar period in Spain. The autarkical regime established in those years implied the isolation of Spanish architecture regarding international cultural trends. Simultaneously, the new political regime turned its back on the modern architecture of the previous decade, associated to some extent with the Republic. Alternatively, it promoted an architecture that inquired into the historical styles of the past. In this context, we take a look at the training received by two architects from Alicante at the Architecture School of Madrid during those years (1942-1953): Francisco Muñoz Llorens and Juan Antonio García Solera. Through their drawings and experiences, as well as based on specialized journal reviews, we can attain a better understanding of the academic curriculum followed by the Spanish architecture students of that period.

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