Beschreibung
The Italian architect Aldo Rossi (1931-1997), a recipient of the renowned Pritzker Prize, is one of the best-known modern architects. The exhibition at the Museum of Architectural Drawing, organised in collaboration with the Fondazione Aldo Rossi in Milan, presents over 110 works on paper by Rossi, some of which are being shown publicly for the first time. An introduction to Rossis drawings is provided by the series Corpus Mediolanensis, consisting of coloured and reworked single-print graphic works, which afford an overview of 30 years of the architects design work. Of special significance in Rossis work is Insula, a series of drawings inspired by models from antiquity and their reinterpretation in the works of Baroque artists such as Giovanni Battista Piranesi (1720-1778) and Claude Lorrain (1600-1682). In complete contrast to the zeitgeist of the 1970s, which animated architects and artists with the hope of creating a better architecture or even a better society by breaking with the past, Rossi found his models in the buildings of earlier centuries. The title of the exhibition refers not only to this series, but also to the traditional construction method of Roman buildings (insulae), an important concept for Rossis architecture as, for example, in projects such as Schützenstraße in Berlin. The German capital as well as his native Italy played a major role in the architects career. Rossi designed unique projects for Berlin, some of which were realised while others, such as the German Historical Museum, remained on paper.