Former Yugoslavia’s brutalist beauty – a photo essay | Art and design | The Guardian
►https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2019/oct/31/former-yugloslavia-brutalist-beauty-a-photo-essay
After the second world war, socialist Yugoslavia set out to reconstruct a land destroyed by fighting. Concrete residential blocks, hotels, civic centres and monuments shot up across the country in a show of power from a state between two worlds, western democracy and the communist east. Photographs by Marko Đurica/Reuters. Written by Ivana Sekularac.
Thu 31 Oct 2019 07.00 GMT
Last modified on Thu 31 Oct 2019 16.50 GMT
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Genex Tower is unmissable on the highway from Belgrade airport to the centre of the city. Its two soaring blocks, connected by an aerial bridge and topped with a long-closed rotating restaurant resembling a space capsule, are such an unusual sight, the 1977-build tower has become a magnet for tourists despite years of neglect. The tower is one of the most significant examples of brutalism – an architectural style popular in the 1950s and 1960s, based on crude, block-like forms cast from concrete.
#architecture #brutalisme #yougoslavie #ex-yougoslavie #serbie #spomenik