A new exhibition at New York’s Museum of Modern Art focuses on the period of intense construction in the former Yugoslavia between its break with the Soviet bloc in 1948 and the death of the country’s longtime leader Josip Broz Tito in 1980
Photos by Valentin Jeck, commissioned by Moma, 2016
Source: Toward a Concrete Utopia: Yugoslavian architecture – in pictures
Photos by Valentin Jeck, commissioned by Moma, 2016
Avala TV Tower Uglješa Bogunović, Slobodan Janjić and Milan Krstić, 1960–65 (destroyed in 1999 and rebuilt in 2010), Mount Avala, near Belgrade, Serbia |
Monument to the Fighters Fallen in the People’s Liberation Struggle Živa Baraga and Janez Lenassi, 1965, Ilirska Bistrica, Slovenia |
S2 Office Tower Milan Mihelič, 1972–78, Ljubljana, Slovenia |
Šerefudin White Mosque Zlatko Ugljen, 1969–79, Visoko, Bosnia and Herzegovina |
Telecommunications Centre Janko Konstantinov, 1968–81, Skopje, Macedonia |
Revolution Square (today Republic Square) Edvard Ravnikar, 1960–74, Ljubljana, Slovenia |
Monument to the Uprising of the People of Kordun and Banija Berislav Šerbetić and Vojin Bakić,1979–81, Petrova Gora, Croatia |
National and University Library of Kosovo Andrija Mutnjaković, 1971–82, Pristina, Kosovo |
Braće Borozan building block in Split 3 Dinko Kovačić and Mihajlo Zorić, 1970–79. Split, Croatia |
Monument to the Ilinden Uprising Jordan and Iskra Grabul, 1970–73, Kruševo, Macedonia |
Source: Toward a Concrete Utopia: Yugoslavian architecture – in pictures
Comments