I love
Santiago Calatrava's light-filled ethereal futuristic architecture, and this is a good basic introduction to the Spanish artist, civil engineer and architect and his work.
The book has good quality photographs of Calatrava's sculptures, buildings and some of his original sketches and drawings, and a very insightful introduction and comments on what makes him different from other contemporary architects as well as the particularities and innovations of each of the featured buildings.
Calatrava has produced a few stunning pieces of architecture since this book was written, so the book falls a bit short, it is outdated, and has barely 100 pages. This being the case, the pricing, although not high per se, it is a bit high in reality.
This is is not a book on Calatrava's complete works but a good first approach to Calatrava, so good enough for the novice.
A nice book for your coffee table as well.
I was looking for one of the Taschen wonderful compilation books on
Arts, and I could not find any at my local bookshop, so I bought this
book instead, to have it as a coffee-table book. This being the case, and the book being so bulky and edited, I did
something I rarely do, which is buying a hard-copy book without spending
enough time browsing through it. Big mistake.
You know a
book of this kind is biased and not serious when countries with a huge
large history of awesome architecture that have passed the proof of time are forgotten in favour of the UK
and USA. I don't mean to say that the buildings in the book are not
great, it is that the way the book is structured gives the impression
and "sells" that UK is the country with the most wonderful awesome
innovative architecture out there, disregarding the bigger achievements
in architecture of countries like France, Italy and Spain. As the book includes
architecture from Ancient times and Antiquity, the bias becomes
even more obvious because parts of the world with wow ancient
architecture are completely misrepresented in favour of countries
like... Australia.That is not to say that one country is better than other, because I do love Australia, but the History of Architecture in Australia is not of the calibre of that of Greece for reasons that are obvious to any Art Historian. Yet, Greece's entries are.... just FIVE!
Isn't that called an imperialistic view of the world?
Just
to give an example of the crap selection, take Syria and Lebanon for
example, two countries with wow Ancient and Medieval architecture. Syria's only
building included is the Great Mosque. Architectonic wonders as Palmyra,
Boshra, Aleppo's Old Souq (now destroyed), any of the Templars castles,
architectonic water deposits are forgotten.... Lebanon's only building
listed is the building of a nightclub as if some of their Ancient
temples and castles were not wow; Balbek, comes to mind.
There is also a
meagre misrepresentation of Asian architecture, in general, and I
missed the Utopian Garden in Singapore, although this might be just
because it was finished after the update of the book. Ethiopia just one entry, Thailand two entries, come on! Botswana not even included.
Of course
you cannot include every single great building or architectural wonder in a book of this sort,
but if you do a selection of this sort, so biased and narcissist, you have lost my respect as a publishing house and editor.
If this was not bad enough, the editor has done a
terrible job with the indexes. The indexes are fragmented, the Index of
Buildings (not by type but by name!) and the Index of Countries are one at the beginning of the
book and the other at the back. No index of featured architects is
included. The Index of Countries is in between the Glossary and the Index of Contributors. And no type of building index either. An example of how not to make an index, Mr
Editor.
The photos are nice, some of them great, some others not, and not all buildings come with a photo. The texts are informative and well written and might you help to understand (or probably not) why some of those buildings are there beyond being... British as a main point to be included in the book.
I have decided that the book is perfect for toilet reading :)