

About Buildings + Cities
Luke Jones & George Gingell Discuss Architecture, History and Culture
A podcast about architecture, buildings and cities, from the distant past to the present day. Plus detours into technology, film, fiction, comics, drawings, and the dimly imagined future.
With Luke Jones and George Gingell.
With Luke Jones and George Gingell.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Dec 16, 2018 • 1h 24min
45 — John Ruskin & the 19th century — Living Too Late
We finally get onto the last book of Stones of Venice, and its reverberations through the long second half of the 19th century.
Young Ruskinians, EL Godwin, William Burges, William Morris and so on.
Music —
Vivaldi concerto for two horns, strings and continuo in F major RV 539 pt I
The Fall — Living too late
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Nov 27, 2018 • 1h 33min
44 — Giovanni Michelucci — Late Style
Giovanni Michelucci was born in 1891, and lived through nine-tenths of the 20th century, through all its terrifying and perplexing twists and dislocations. Throughout his career, his work manages to express an idiosyncratic and critical relationship to the spirit of the age. Over fifty at the end of the war, and sacked from his university job in the late 1950s for being too old, he would go on to produce his best and most daring work in the 60s and 70s.
We discuss Michelucci and Italy, fascism, post-war, and late style.
Apologies for the quality of Luke’s audio —
On the bonus, we take a longer look at the ideological tensions within Mussolini-era architecture, Giovanni Muzio, Giuseppe Terragni, and many others.
Music —
Rossini ‘Le Cenerentola’
Blackway — New Life
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Nov 22, 2018 • 26min
Shoetopia! — by Stories from the Eastern West
A collaboration between About Buildings + Cities and Stories from the Eastern West (@sftewpodcast) — a cool podcast telling little-known stories from Central & Eastern Europe.
We discuss Tomas Bata's modernist shoe-factory Utopia in Zlin, Moravia, his project to create an orderly (and suitably hierarchical) paradise for loyal, productive, clean-living workers, and the spread of his model all over Europe — even as far as Essex!
Thanks a lot to Wojciech and Adam for coming to interview us.
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Nov 12, 2018 • 49min
Conversation 2.2 — Adam Caruso — Second Thoughts
This is the audio from our ‘In Conversation’ with Adam Caruso, held at Nottingham Contemporary on October the 4th.
You can (and probably should, if you want to know what’s going on) download the slides from the presentation here — https://tinyurl.com/y7gab672
We didn’t get through the whole slideshow, but we’ll talk about what we missed on the second part.
Thanks a lot to Sam, Mercè et al at Nottingham Contemporary…!
And to you, listener, for listening.
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Nov 12, 2018 • 1h 53min
Conversation 2.1 — Adam Caruso — On the night
This is the audio from our ‘In Conversation’ with Adam Caruso, held at Nottingham Contemporary on October the 4th.
You can (and probably should, if you want to know what’s going on) download the slides from the presentation here — https://tinyurl.com/y7gab672
We didn’t get through the whole slideshow, but we’ll talk about what we missed on the second part.
Thanks a lot to Sam, Mercè et al at Nottingham Contemporary…!
And to you, listener, for listening.
Support the show on Patreon to receive bonus content for every show.
Please rate and review the show on your podcast store to help other people find us!
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We’re on the web at aboutbuildingsandcities.org
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17 snips
Oct 30, 2018 • 1h 43min
43 — John Ruskin's 'Stones of Venice' — Shafts!
Delve into the enchanting world of John Ruskin’s 'Stones of Venice.' The discussion covers architectural wonders like Gothic cornices and the transformation of columns. Unravel the melancholy beauty of decaying structures and the island of Torcello's poignant past. Explore how Ruskin intertwines personal memories with architectural narratives, revealing emotional depths behind his love for natural forms. The journey also critiques contemporary design while celebrating the soul of Gothic craftsmanship and resilience against industrial monotony.

15 snips
Sep 30, 2018 • 1h 21min
42 — John Ruskin — Rock Lover
John Ruskin’s ‘Stones of Venice’ is one of the monuments of architectural theory in the 19th century. But it’s a hard book to get through, or to get inside. It’s incredibly long, and animated by a kind of moralistic passion that feels a little alien, at best quaint, or childish. Part of the reason is that Ruskin was a Victorian — indeed, one of the great formers of Victorian taste.
We were planning to talk about the first part of the book, but in the end we just spent the whole episode trying to get to grips with what that means. Why was he like this?
We’ll read the first two parts in the next episode. Thanks for being patient!
As usual we got a couple of things wrong — Little Nell is actually in ‘The Old Curiosity Shop’. Also the number of volumes of ‘modern painters’ isn’t five — there are 7, actually — though often sold as five volumes.
Music —
Tita Ruffo ‘Visione Veneziana’
Audio includes — the following site recordings from the Radio Aporee project on archive.org
Ksamil, Albanie - Midnight waves / by François-Emmanuel Fodéré (link)[https://archive.org/details/aporee_25349_29390]
17590 Ars-en-Ré, France - Waves wheeling / by Vincent Duseigne (link)[https://archive.org/details/aporee_40307_46036]
river Drava, Loka - dry grass, river flow, stones / by OR poiesis (link)[https://archive.org/details/aporee_25057_29057]
larnichtsberg, swallows, crows and insects / by Frank Schulte (link)[https://archive.org/details/aporee_11544_13596]
Venice, Italy - fish market / by Carlos Santos (link)[https://archive.org/details/aporee_16461_19081]
12230 Nant, France - Nant bells / by Vincent Duseigne (link)[https://archive.org/details/aporee_32229_37026]
Ksamil, Ksamil island, District de Sarandë, Albanie - Waves and waves / by François-Emmanuel Fodéré (link)[https://archive.org/details/aporee_30140_34668]
Bruges, Belgique - Brugge bells / by Vincent Duseigne (link)[https://archive.org/details/aporee_31798_36523]
Support the show on Patreon to receive bonus content for every show.
Please rate and review the show on your podcast store to help other people find us!
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Sep 16, 2018 • 42min
Conversation 1 — Fred Scharmen — Zero-G Carnival
A short post-script to the Space Age episodes — we talked to Fred Scharmen about the mid 1970s NASA Space Settlements design study.
You can read his essay at Places Journal where you can also see a selection of Rick Guidice and Don Davis’s illustrations.
We’ll have a new full episode out very soon —
Luke's graphic novel is here
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Aug 23, 2018 • 1h 6min
41 — '2001 – A Space Odyssey' 2/2 — Live on BBC 12
The second part of our discussion of '2001 — A Space Odyssey'.
At a certain point quite early on we started referring to the Monolith as 'the Obelisk' and neither of us noticed. Oh well.
Thanks for listening and let us know your thoughts.
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Aug 2, 2018 • 1h 8min
40 — '2001 – A Space Odyssey' 1/2 — Pink Upholstery in Cartesian Space
Stanley Kubrick’s 1968 film 2001 a space odyssey is the iconic depiction of space travel, channeling the optimism and excitement of radical advances in space exploration and technology. It’s an uncompromising, utterly singular film, whose vision of a possible future is carried through comprehensively. Its scope and ambition are still basically unequalled. Kubrick is famous for the obsessiveness of his research — in this case bringing in expertise from leading scientists, cutting edge digital pioneers, animators, makers of special effects. As a result, 2001 seems to capture the imagination of a very particular era of technological optimism in the mid 1960s in America and worldwide.
We talk about the film, its amazing worlds and interiors, the Worlds Fairs in Seattle and New York which were a proving ground for many of those involved, as well as passing references to
— Chris Marker’s La Jetee
— Charles and Ray Eames
— Xerox PARC
— Superstudio
Support the show on Patreon to receive bonus content for every show. On this episode's bonus — we're talking Osaka Expo and Space habitats.
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