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Fundación César Manrique, Lanzarote / Text, Simón Marchán Fiz ; photographs, Pedro Martínez de Albornoz.

LIBRA N7113.M28 M37 1996
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Marchán Fiz, Simón.
Contributor:
Martínez de Albornoz, Pedro.
Series:
Opus (Berlin, Germany) ; 16.
Opus ; 16
Language:
English
German
Spanish
Subjects (All):
Manrique, César, 1920-1992.
Manrique, César.
Fundación César Manrique.
Dwellings--Canary Islands--Lanzarote.
Dwellings.
Museum architecture--Canary Islands--Lanzarote.
Museum architecture.
Canary Islands--Lanzarote.
Physical Description:
60 pages : illustrations (some color), plans ; 31 cm.
Place of Publication:
Stuttgart : Axel Menges, [1996]
Language Note:
In English, German and Spanish.
Summary:
The island of Lanzarote has become one of the favourite tourism destinations in the Canary Islands over the last few decades. However, our interest is more one of artistic than of touristic discovery, and this would be virtually unthinkable without the work of an artist who fell in love with this wonderful paradise. We refer to Cesar Manrique (1919-1992), who was able to see and reveal to us the unique beauties arising out of the happy marriage of the four elements believed by the Greeks to form the whole of creation: air, earth, fire and water.
In fact, after returning to his island in 1968 after a period spent in New York, Manrique dedicated himself passionately to realizing his utopia, to renew Lanzarote out of his own sources. Among Manrique's best known works on rote are the Casa Museo del Campesino, the Jameos del Agua, the Mirador del Rio, the Cactus Garden and his own house in the Taro de Tahiche.
Manrique's house in Taro de Tahiche, which nowadays houses the Cesar Manrique Foundation, can be considered as a work in progress as it was built over a period of almost 25 years and was still not completed upon the artist's death. Arising out of the five interconnected volcanic bubbles of the underground storey, it has become a metaphor for the amorous meeting of man with Mother Earth, this latter being understood, to use Bruno Taut's expression, as a fine home for living. The spaces on the upper floor can be virtually mistaken for the white cubic buildings dispersed throughout the island. But when we cross their thresholds, we have the unique feeling that here something was created which is really new. In fact, Manrique -- enemy in equal measure of the pastiche of regionalism and the off-key International Style blind to differentiation -- sifted the vernacular with certain modern filters such as Frank Lloyd Wright, Mies van der Rohe or Le Corbusier, and at the same time gave it such a specific stamp that the final result became indigenous and unmistakeable.
Simon Marchan Fiz is Professor of Aesthetics in Madrid.
ISBN:
3930698161
OCLC:
34985458

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