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However, the curators of the Sert exhibitions feel that returning to Sert’s original intentions can be illuminating for Harvard and Cambridge alike...

Author: By Christian A. Stayner, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Reshaping Harvard’s Landscape | 10/10/2003 | See Source »

...Boston has to change with the times,” Sert said in a 1964 Boston Globe article. And he was going to change it—beginning with Harvard...

Author: By Christian A. Stayner, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Reshaping Harvard’s Landscape | 10/10/2003 | See Source »

When a wave of political revolutions effectively ended many of his urban design commissions in Latin America, the scale of Sert’s projects would diminish while retaining their grand social aims. With the construction of the Holyoke Center in 1958, Sert would unofficially assume the role of the University’s architect. His most visible commission at Harvard, the massive Science Center, completed in 1973, would remain Harvard’s largest building until the opening of the Medical School’s New Research Building just last month...

Author: By Christian A. Stayner, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Reshaping Harvard’s Landscape | 10/10/2003 | See Source »

Amid the student protests and social idealism of the sixties, avant-garde architects such as Sert saw the opportunity to use the University as a living laboratory. The most visible of these projects, a darling of Modernist architects, was an approach to building with pre-fabricated components. The modular concrete panels and brightly colored brise-soleil baffles of the Holyoke Center are indicative of Sert’s larger social goals of implementing low-cost building techniques for housing...

Author: By Christian A. Stayner, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Reshaping Harvard’s Landscape | 10/10/2003 | See Source »

...architect, Sert proves to be difficult to locate: his dogmatic, CIAM-influenced urban planning seems antithetical to his interest in integrating the arts with architecture. While CIAM projects were ultimately the sites for murals and public sculpture, there is little exploration of this theme in the two exhibits...

Author: By Christian A. Stayner, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Reshaping Harvard’s Landscape | 10/10/2003 | See Source »

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