
Capturing The Appeal Of Brutalism
A new tome explores the beauty within the architectural movement.
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Brutalism is one of the most polarising architectural styles, but it continues to captivate people across the globe. So much so, in fact, that the pioneers of the movement and their most famous works have been immortalised in a new Phaidon book titled The Brutalists: Brutalism’s Best Architects.
Brutalist architecture gained popularity in the postwar era of the 1950s and 1960s, which grew out of the early 20th-century modernist movement. The style is defined by block-like forms—predominantly made from concrete or brick—with angular geometric shapes, unadorned structures, textured surfaces, simple silhouettes, and raw materials. Brutalism eschews glamorous grandeur and intricate patterns in favour of minimalist style.
Penned by Owen Hopkins, the tome chronicles 350 Brutalist buildings from 1936 to today. It showcases structures from Australia to Bangladesh to Canada, England, Ukraine, Japan, South Africa, and beyond. Works featured include Raffaele Contigiana’s Hôtel du Lac in Tunisia from 1973; Ludwig Godefroy’s Casa Zicatela in Oaxaca, Mexico from 2015; and Alison and Peter Smithson’s Robin Hood Gardens in London from 1972, among others.
The hardcover also profiles 250 influential starchitects, from A to Z, including Le Corbusier, Peter Smithson, Mayumi Watanabe de Souza Lima, and Igor Vasilevsky, as well as other less-recognized names. The book also highlights influential female architects, like Charlotte Perriand, who designed many radical buildings while working for Le Corbusier that the Swiss-French architect took credit for.
The Brutalists also examines the dualities of the style; how it embodies both the future and the past. Brutalism has garnered an almost cult-like following, but the book questions whether it has a role in the architecture of tomorrow. The author certainly thinks so. Hopkins is director of the Farrell Center at Newcastle University and was previously the senior curator of exhibitions and education at Sir John Soane’s Museum and the architecture program curator at the Royal Academy of Arts. He was inspired to write the book due to the resurgence of the style in today’s architecture. Pick it up for $70 and you can weigh the future of Brutalism yourself.
“THE BRUTALISTS” COFFEE TABLE BOOK $56
Check out more photos from the book:




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