Toward a Concrete Utopia: Architecture in Yugoslavia, 1948-1980
By Martino Stierli (Editor), Martino Stierli (Text by), Vladimir Kulic (Editor), Vladimir Kulic (Text by), Vladimir Deskov (Text by), Ana Ivanovska Desakova (Text by), Andrew Herscher (Text by), Jovan Ivanovski (Text by), Jelica Jovanovic (Text by), Anna Kats (Text by), Tamara Bjazic Klarin (Text by), Juliet Kinchin (Text by), Martina Malesic (Text by), Maroje Mrduljas (Text by), Arber Sadiki (Text by), Luka Skansi (Text by), Lukasz Stanek (Text by), Sanja Horvatincic (Text by), Theodossis Issaias (Text by)
Hardcover
$65.00
By Martino Stierli (Editor), Martino Stierli (Text by), Vladimir Kulic (Editor), Vladimir Kulic (Text by), Vladimir Deskov (Text by), Ana Ivanovska Desakova (Text by), Andrew Herscher (Text by), Jovan Ivanovski (Text by), Jelica Jovanovic (Text by), Anna Kats (Text by), Tamara Bjazic Klarin (Text by), Juliet Kinchin (Text by), Martina Malesic (Text by), Maroje Mrduljas (Text by), Arber Sadiki (Text by), Luka Skansi (Text by), Lukasz Stanek (Text by), Sanja Horvatincic (Text by), Theodossis Issaias (Text by)
Premium Members save an extra 10% and all Members collect stamps to save with Rewards. 10 stamps = $5.Learn More
Select a store to view item availability.
In Yugoslavia’s “Third Way” architecture, Brutalism meets the fantastical
Squeezed between the two rival Cold War blocs, Yugoslav architecture consistently adhered to a modernist trajectory. As a founding nation of the Non-Aligned Movement, Yugoslavia became a major exporter of modernist architecture to Africa and the Middle East in a postcolonial world. By merging a variety of local traditions and contemporary international influences in the context of a unique Yugoslav brand of socialism, ...


