In Space, Time & Architecture (1941), Giedion wrote an influential standard history of modern architecture, while Mechanization Takes Command established a new kind of historiography.
Biography
Sigfried Giedion was born in Prague to Swiss-Jewish parents. His father was a textile manufacturer from Zugersee. He graduated from the University of Vienna in 1913 with a degree in engineering. Not wanting to enter the family business, he wrote poems and plays, one of which was staged by Max Reinhardt. He then studied art history in Munich with Heinrich Wölfflin, graduating in 1922 with a thesis on Romanesque and late Baroque Classicism. This work aroused the interest of A.E. Brinckmann, a well-known art historian, who invited him to Cologne, an offer that Giedion refused because he was not interested in an academic career. Instead, in 1923 he attended the Bauhaus, where he met Walter Gropius. From that meeting he got closer and closer to the Bauhaus and its protagonists, becoming himself a precursor of the modern movement.
In 1928, he founded, together with Le Corbusier and Helène de Mandrot, the CIAM, of which he was also general secretary. In the same year, he took part in the collective initiative Werkbundsiedlung Neubühl, one of the first residential centers in the style of the modern movement, remaining on the steering committee until 1939. He was also the builder of the Doldertalhäuser in Switzerland, which he saw as a manifesto of the new architectural movement, as well as the founder of Wohnbedarf AG, a construction company close to the modern movement. Through countless interventions in international trade journals, he expressed his support for Le Corbusier's League of Nations project in Geneva, won in 1927 but disqualified because the submission was in the wrong medium.
In 1938–39, he taught at Harvard University at the instigation of Gropius, where he gave the Charles Eliot Norton Memorial Lectures. These helped form the basis for his work, Space, Time and Architecture, the history of the modern movement published in 1941. In 1946 he became a professor at the ETH-Zürich (Federal Polytechnic School), a post he held until the 1960s, and which he alternated with another at MIT in the United States of America. During this time he wrote busily, both as a CIAM editor and as an independent author, about his research on modernity, most notably Mechanization Takes Command, a critical history of mechanization seen in its historical and sociological aspects.
In 1968, Giedion suffered a heart attack when walking home from the cinema.[2] He died in Zurich on the 10th of April 1968.
Works
Spätbarocker und romantischer Klassizismus, 1922
Befreites Wohnen, 1929, published in English as Liberated Dwelling, Lars Müller Publishers, 2019
Space, Time and Architecture: The Growth of a New Tradition, 1941. Harvard University Press, 5th edition, 2003, ISBN0-674-83040-7
Nine Points on Monumentality, 1943
Mechanization Takes Command: A Contribution to Anonymous History, Oxford University Press 1948
Walter Gropius, work and teamwork, Reinhold Pub. Co. 1954
Architecture, You and Me: The Diary of a Development, Harvard UP 1958
The Eternal Present: The Beginnings of Art and The Beginnings of Architecture, 1964 [1957]
Architecture and the Phenomenona of Transition. The Three Space Conceptions in Architecture, 1971
Building in France, Building in Iron, Building in Ferroconcrete, Getty Research Institute, 1995, originally published in German as Bauen in Frankreich, Bauen in Eisen, Bauen in Eisenbeton (Leipzig: Klinkhardt & Biermann, 1928)
^Martens, Janno (December 2020). "Lost and found in translation: the post-war adaptation strategies of Sigfried Giedion and Alexander Dorner". Journal of Art Historiography (23): 3.
References
Sokratis Georgiadis (1993). Sigfried Giedion: An Intellectual Biography, Edinburgh University Press
Reto Geiser. Giedion and America. Repositioning the History of Modern Architecture. gta Verlag, Zurich 2018, ISBN978-3-85676-377-0.
Almut Grunewald. The Giedion World: Sigfried Giedion and Carola Giedion-Welcker in Dialogue. Translated by Bronwen Saunders. Zurich: Scheidegger & Spiess, 2019. ISBN 978-3858818195.