Spomenik Monument Database bookcover

Spomenik Monument Database

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Description

A guidebook to the wild world of communist minimalism in Tito's Yugoslavia

Spomenik--the Serbo-Croat/Slovenian word for monument--refers to the memorials built in Tito's Republic of Yugoslavia from the 1960s to the 1980s, marking the horror of the occupation and the defeat of Axis forces during World War II. Hundreds were built across the country, from coastal resorts to remote mountains. Through these imaginative forms of concrete and steel, a classless, forward-looking socialist society, free of ethnic tensions, was envisaged. Instead of looking to the ideologically aligned Soviet Union for artistic inspiration, Tito turned to the West and works of abstract expressionism and minimalism. This allowed Yugoslavia to develop its own distinct identity through the monuments, turning them into political tools, articulating Tito's personal vision of a new tomorrow.

Today, following the breakup of the country and the subsequent Yugoslav Wars of the 1990s, some have been destroyed or abandoned. Many have suffered the consequences of ethnic tensions: once viewed as symbols of hope, they are now the focus of resentment and anger.

This book brings together the largest collection of spomeniks published to date. Each has been extensively photographed and researched by the author, making this book the most comprehensive survey of this obscure and fascinating architectural phenomenon. The inside of the book's dust jacket opens out as a map, giving the exact geographic coordinates for each monument.

Product Details

PublisherFuel
Publish DateAugust 28, 2018
Pages208
LanguageEnglish
TypeBook iconHardback
EAN/UPC9780995745537
Dimensions8.1 X 6.7 X 1.1 inches | 1.4 pounds

Reviews

A new publication that brings together more than 80 awe-inspiring Brutalist monuments, exploring each one's historical value, design, construction and current status.--Milly Burroughs "AnOther Man"
Niebyl is punctilious in laying out the particulars of the design and construction of these structures, whose uncanny forms create a kind of visual "vocabulary of the revolution."-- "Metropolis"

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