How these menacing towers of raw concrete that just a few short years ago were considered the ugliest buildings in the world became highly covetable and intensely influential all over again.
Social media and coffee table books have been "bringing new attention and new eyes" to the brutalist style, an expert tells Newsweek.
For nearly five long years, the Frick closed for a $330 million renovation, its grounds torn up, its buildings covered in ...
Many of America’s brutalist buildings now present a choice between expensive ... Then comes Gordon Bunshaft’s concrete donut-bunker, the Hirshhorn Museum, with its narrow, gun-emplacement-like opening ...
The museum, based in Henry Clay Frick’s 1914 Fifth Avenue mansion, reopens with a deft expansion worthy of a New York ...
Brutalism is divisive (President Trump is not a fan) and, as it happens Capital Brutalism, an exhibit that will run through the end of June at the National Building Museum, has already floated some ...
The Museum of Modern Art began exhibiting models ... Brady Corbet’s “The Brutalist” and Francis Ford Coppola’s “Megalopolis.” To be sure, both films peddle the trope of the embattled ...
The Frick Collection is famously a house museum—the actual residence of American industrialist and businessman Henry Clay ...