An Architectural Avant-Garde?
At one moment at least in recent architectural history an attempt was made to come
up with a consistent but comprehensive response to the challenge of modernity. The
modern movement saw itself embodying a concept of architecture that constituted
a legitimate answer to the experience of modernity and to the problems and possi-
bilities resulting from the process of modernization. In its initial phase it had strong
ties to avant-garde movements such as futurism and constructivism. It shared their
opposition to tradition and to the false claims of nineteenth-century bourgeois cul-
ture. One should wonder, however, how far this alliance goes and whether the basic
conceptions about the new architecture do line up with the position of the avant-
garde in art and literature.
The phenomenon of the artistic avant-garde is historically linked to the rise of
kitsch.^1 Both avant-garde and kitsch can be seen as reactions to the experience of
I have attempted
to establish,
both by argument
and by objective evidence,
that in spite of the
seeming confusion
there is nevertheless
a true, if hidden, unity,
a secret synthesis,
in our present civilization.
Sigfried Giedion, 1941