Masterplan for Islamabad, designed by Constantinos A. Doxiadis
seen from Netherlands

seen from Türkiye
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seen from Mexico
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seen from Tunisia
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seen from T1
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Masterplan for Islamabad, designed by Constantinos A. Doxiadis
Fifty-five years after the 1963 earthquake that demolished 80% of the city of Skopje, the contribution of Constantinos Doxiadis in the redesign of the city is still largely unknown. Meanwhile, the history of the modernist buildings that dotted the new city scape, after Kenzo Tange’s office took on the task of redesigning the city center, remains unappreciated. Many excellent examples of metabolism and brutalism, have been suffering from decades of neglect.
In recent years, both Doxiadis and the modernist heritage of Skopje have started to enjoy the increasing interest of the architectural community both in the Balkans and abroad. This exhibition will bring to surface for the first time in Greece Doxiadis’s extraordinary work in Skopje, which includes a detailed survey of the affected areas, strategic planning, and a new outline for the master plan. Furthermore, it will introduce to the Greek public the work of Kenzo Tange for Skopje’s city center, and showcase a series of modernist buildings authored by leading Yugoslavian architects that still stand today in the center of the city. The exhibition material has been contributed by the Doxiadis Archives, the Museum of Skopje and the personal collection of Jovan Ivanovski, Ana Ivanovska and Vladimir Deskov.
Doxiadis’ Informational Modernism by Ricky Ruihong Li
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Doxiadis’ Informational Modernism by Ricky Ruihong Li
Doxiadis’ Informational Modernism by Ricky Ruihong Li ad
Is the National Gallery’s most valuable Rubens painting a fake? The mystery of the severed foot
For nearly 40 years, the British art gallery has defended the Flemish Baroque master’s authorship of ‘Samson and Delilah’ Upon entering Room 15 of London’s National Gallery, visitors are mesmerized by the painting in the background. Samson — a giant, bare-chested mass of muscle — rests, exhausted, on Delilah’s lap. Her bare breasts are revealed. An accomplice of the beautiful Philistine cuts…
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Meg.
Ecumenopolis, 1967, C. Doxiadis @ Ametria, Benaki Museum, Athens, Greece
Architects: Kokkinou - Kourkoulas