Aldo Rossi, Complesso Uffici GFT Casa Aurora, Torino, Italy, 1984-1987 VS Adolf Loos, Goldman & Salatsch Building | “Looshaus”, Vienna, Austria, 1909-1911
seen from Bahrain
seen from China
seen from China
seen from Bahrain

seen from Brazil

seen from Italy
seen from China

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Bolivia
seen from China
seen from Bahrain
seen from China

seen from Malaysia
seen from Vietnam

seen from United States
seen from Netherlands
seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from China
Aldo Rossi, Complesso Uffici GFT Casa Aurora, Torino, Italy, 1984-1987 VS Adolf Loos, Goldman & Salatsch Building | “Looshaus”, Vienna, Austria, 1909-1911
Imbuing space with time leads to spatializing via the production of histories. Which histories do this work in postmodernity? Or, rather, what claims for identity and subjectivity produce histories through spatialization in Euro-American critical practices?
Caren Kaplan, “Postmodern Geographies,” from Questions of Travel, 1996
Thot
The main problem (one of) w/ pomo is that they don’t put forward answers so Metamodernism should put forward answers.
Postmodernism
"...skeptical interpretations of culture, literature, art, philosophy, economics, architecture, fiction, and literary criticism" - Wikipedia
So while young painters are reading art magazines and often as not following to some degree developments in film, performance or video, photography students are reading photography magazines, disputing the merits of documentary mode over self expression, or resurrecting onto the fourth generation an exhausted formalism that can no longer generate either heat or light.
Abigail Solomon- Godeau "Art Photography and Postmodernism"
with amazing music by Ryûichi Sakamoto
In many ways, the hegemon has learned to adapt to the conditions of postmodernity more rapidly and creatively than the subaltern, especially when the latter remains frozen between modernist and postmodernist radical subjectivities.
Edward Soja, Thirdspace: Journeys to Los Angeles and Other Real-and-Imagined Places (1996:93n10)
Postmodernism lives.
Celeste Olalquiaga, Megalopolis (1992:xi)