Descripción
Primitive Architecture (1978) by Enrico Guidoni (Harry N Abrams). ISBN: 0810910268. Before the glass towers, the suburban cul-de-sacs, and the terrifying McMansions with seventeen fake gables, there was?well?architecture at its rawest: huts, totems, longhouses, stone piles, and the kinds of shelters that say ?we needed a roof before we needed an architect.? In Primitive Architecture , Enrico Guidoni hauls us back to the dawn of design, when you built things with sticks, stones, and the occasional bone, and the only blueprint was necessity plus a bit of imagination. This 1978 Abrams edition is lavishly illustrated (because what?s the point of a book on huts if you can?t see them?). Think sweeping photos of tribal dwellings, diagrams of structural ingenuity, and a parade of buildings that remind you: humanity?s greatest trick has always been stacking stuff so it doesn?t fall down. Guidoni isn?t here to sneer at ?primitive? either?he?s showing how ingenious these early structures are, how they solved problems with elegance, rhythm, and local materials long before ?sustainable? was a buzzword. Condition: Very Good. Which, in Crappy Old Books land, means this hefty tome hasn?t been used to prop up a wonky table, nor as a makeshift roof beam. Spine strong, pages clean, no tribal rain damage. You could almost imagine it was carved out of basalt, but no?it?s just paper. Own this book, and suddenly that IKEA flat-pack won?t seem quite so impressive. You?ll look at your plasterboard walls and think: ?A Neolithic longhouse would have been sturdier.? It?s an armchair journey into humanity?s oldest obsession: keeping dry, staying warm, and making sure the neighbours are impressed by your hut.
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