Trang chủ Tiếng Anh Lớp 12 ORGANIC ARCHITECTURE Organic vegetables, organic bread, organic toothpaste... the word has been used as a kind of talisman to ward...
Câu hỏi :

ORGANIC ARCHITECTURE Organic vegetables, organic bread, organic toothpaste... the word has been used as a kind of talisman to ward off the evils of consumer societies in which so many things, from what people eat to the homes they live in, have become mass-produced, unsettling and even unhealthy. Organic architecture is an equally loose term, yet it conveys an idea of buildings designed to grow naturally from the ground they stand on. It conjures too the idea of buildings that are made of natural materials, that seem somehow to belong in a way that Classical temples never do. It also conveys the idea of buildings that make a play on natural forms and employ geometries that have little to do with Euclid and mathematical perfection, as well as suggesting buildings that are designed to be wide open to the elements. In extreme cases, as with the work of Antoni Gaudi, buildings really do seem to be plants and animals growing naturally out of the ground rather than being projected unnaturally into the sky. Antoni Gaudí created a form of architecture made up of what appeared to be bones and sinews, or tendrils and shoots. Architects like Bruce Goff and Herb Greene shaped a shaggy architecture that might be home for animals and insects as well as human beings. Frank Lloyd Wright, one of the century's most influential architects, left a legacy of Organic buildings that fit into the depths of rural America as they do in the grid-iron Manhattan. Imre Makovecz, who founded an entire school of Organic architects and craftsmen in Hungary, described his designs as "building beings", and indeed at their strange and haunting best they really do feel as if they are alive and breathing. What all the buildings of this type have in common is the sense of being close to nature, either in terms of location or materials used in their construction. Each of the buildings is highly individualistic and none is held back by precedent or convention. They are in their own way highly emotional buildings, but unlike the architectural expression of Postmodernism, none is cynical, too clever or too knowing Quite the reverse: most have an innocence about them, each an attempt to take architecture into unknown waters. Veering between the eccentric and the proudly magnificent, this loose fraternity of building includes some of the century's most likeable as well as curious. With increasing concern for ecological issues and the natural world, it seems likely that Organic architecture will blossom rather than wilt. Casa Mila, Antoni Gaudí, 1910, Barcelona Spain This truly strange building is known locally as la Pedrera, or the quarry. Yet, far from being a heaps of stones, it is a brilliantly resolved stone palazzo into which Gaudi has poured sinuous apartments that are like nothing else on earth. The seven-storey building is grouped around two courtyards so that each flat, large or small, is lit. Outside, the block appears to stand on the legs of stone elephants, while balconies and window mouldings just out like strange lips beneath a roof garden which is like a Dali painting come to life. The architect, Antoni Gaudi Cornet (1852-1926) was one of the most extraordinary architects ever. A devout Catholic he lived the life of an ascetic monk and was taken for a tramp when admitted to hospital having been fatally knocked down by a tram while pondering on the construction of his unfinished masterpiece, the Catheral of the Sagrada Familia (Sacred Family). Gaudi's was a highly individualistic attempt to reconcile Architecture to Nature. The truly remarkable thing about Gaudi's work is that it is always logical in its own willful manner: he may have looked at the world in a way very different from the majority of twentieth-century architects, yet he is never gratuitous and never sinks into kitsch. So demanding is the alternative logic of Gaudi's sense of structure that it is obvious why he left no real followers, or no one competent to take the risks he did. Do hơn 5000 ký tự nên e thiếu một đoạn Mội người có thể tìm trên gg để đọc tiếp ạ Em cảm ơn Complete the summary. Choose NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS from the passage for each answer of the questions 1-7. Buildings designed in the style of organic architecture use 1 _______ shapes and materials. Inside Antoni Gaudi's Casa Mila, which is constructed of 2________, there are 3________which ensure that each apartment receives sufficient light, while the roof of the building can be compared to 4________. The Sydney Opera House also has an exciting 5________with which many comparisons can be made. The Opera House's disappointing 6 _______ could be explained by the fact that Jorn Utzon was not given the opportunity to complete 7 _______ of the building.

Lời giải 1 :

Buildings designed in the style of organic architecture use 1 ___natural ____ shapes and materials.

Thông tin:  It conjures too the idea of buildings that are made of natural materials, that seem somehow to belong in a way that Classical temples never do./ It also conveys the idea of buildings that make a play on natural forms

Inside Antoni Gaudi's Casa Mila, which is constructed of 2___bones and sinews_____,

Thông tin: Antoni Gaudí created a form of architecture made up of what appeared to be bones and sinews, or tendrils and shoots.

there are 3___two courtyards_____which ensure that each apartment receives sufficient light, while the roof of the building can be compared to 4______Dali painting__.

Thông tin: The seven-storey building is grouped around two courtyards so that each flat, large or small, is lit.

while balconies and window mouldings just out like strange lips beneath a roof garden which is like a Dali painting come to life.

The Sydney Opera House also has an exciting 5________with which many comparisons can be made. The Opera House's disappointing 6 _______ could be explained by the fact that Jorn Utzon was not given the opportunity to complete 7 _______ of the building.

=>Thiếu đề 

Bạn có biết?

Tiếng Anh là ngôn ngữ German Tây, được nói từ thời Trung cổ tại Anh, ngày nay là lingua franca toàn cầu. Tiếng Anh là ngôn ngữ phổ biến nhất trên thế giới, được sử dụng rộng rãi trong giao tiếp quốc tế, kinh doanh và khoa học. Hãy chăm chỉ học tiếng Anh để mở rộng cánh cửa đến với thế giới!

Nguồn :

Wikipedia - Bách khoa toàn thư

Tâm sự lớp 12

Lớp 12 - Năm cuối ở cấp trung học phổ thông, năm học quan trọng nhất trong đời học sinh, trải qua bao năm học tập, bao nhiêu kỳ vọng của người thân xung quanh. Những nỗi lo về thi đại học và định hướng tương lai thật là nặng nề. Hãy tin vào bản thân, mình sẽ làm được và tương lai mới đang chờ đợi chúng ta!

Nguồn :

sưu tập

Copyright © 2024 Giai BT SGK