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~ SpringerWienNewYork Aid Vodopivec RokZnidarsi( (Ed..) Edvard Ravnikar Architect and Teacher Friedrich Achleitner J. WilliaIl1 R. Curti Friedrich Kurrent Bori Podrecca Luciano Sernerani Ales Vodopivec SpringerWienNewYork ALESVODOPIVEC(Ed.) ©StaneBernik:279 Architect.FacultyofArchitecture.UniversityofLjubljana. ©RokZnidarsic:20,55left.278 Slovenia ©AlesVodopivec46left ROK:lNIDARSIC(Ed.) ©FacultyofArchitecture.LjubljanaIArchitectureMuseumof Architect.FacultyofArchitecture.UniversityofLjubljana. Ljubljana:17,21,22,23,24right.27top.27bottom.29,30,31, Slovenia 37,38.45.47right.54right.61.82top.82bottom.83.84.88. 90-9'.92.93top.93bottom.94.95.98right.104.124top.124 Thisworkissubject tocopyright. middle.124.125.133.150bottom.154top.154bottom.158.'59. Allrightsarereserved.whetherthewholeorpartofthematerial 184.185,210top.211top.232,234-235.236,237,246,248top. isconcerned.specificallythoseoftranslation.reprinting.re-use 248middle,248bottom.249.250.25'.254.255.256.257.262, ofillustrations.broadcasting.reproductionbyphotocopying 276.277.29',3'4.3'5.3,6,3'7 machinesorsimilarmeans.andstorageindatabanks. ©Ambient:18.19left.19right,196.198-199top.'98-'99 bottom.200top.200bottom,201,216,218,219.220,221,222. ProductLiability:Thepublishercangivenoguaranteeforthe 223,224,228top.228bottom,229,230,23',238.239.240.241. informationcontainedinthisbook.Theuseofregisterednames. 242-243top.242-243bottom.244.245,252-253,292left.292 trademarks.etc.inthispublicationdoesnotimply.eveninthe right.293left.293right absenceofspecificstatement.thatsuchnamesareexemptfrom ©ModernGallery.Ljubljana:70right.74. 77,80.86.87 therelevantprotectivelawsandregulationsandthereforefreefor ©FondationLeCorbusier:15right.42left,43right generaluse. ©ArchivesoftheRepublicofSlovenia:85 ©PhotographicarchiveofMuseumofGorenjska:98left.99(Iaka ©2010Springer-Verlag/Vienna Cop).144(CeneAvgustin),259(D.Holynski) ©Texts.imagesandgraphicmaterialremainwiththeauthors ©HistoryArchiveofLjubljana(ZAL):27,170(LJUI73,09.03.), ©WilliamJ.R.Curtis.2009:'Preface,OverlappingTerritories: 171(L/UI73.09.04.).172(LJUI73,09.04.).173(LJUI73.10.05.). OnSituatingEdvardRavnikar'andtext'AbstractionandRepre 210bottom(LJUI73,30.02.).212(LJUI73,28.02.),213top.213 sentation;TheMemorialComplexatKampor,ontheIslandof bottom(LJUI73.28.02.) Rab(1952-53)byEdvardRavnikar' ©DepartmentforwargraveyardsattheMinistryofLabour,Fam ilyandSocialAffairs:36top.36bottom.39left.39right PrintedinSlovenia SpringerWienNewYorkisapartofSpringerScience-Business Media Wewouldliketothankthefollowinginstitutionswhosegenerous springer.at supportmadethisbookpossible:FacultyofArchitecture.LjU bljana;ARRS-SlovenianResearchAgency;MinistryofCulture, Graphicdesignandlayout:PeterSkalar RepublicofSlovenia;MunicipalityofNovagorica;Municipality Archiveandgraphicreproductionworks:NejcLebar ofLjubljana;MunicipalityofMaribor;APId.o.o:ArcadiaLight TranslationfromSiovenianintoEnglish:Sanja[ureaAvci wear;BTCd.d.;CEEREFNalozbed.o.o.,Komunaprojektd.d.; TranslationfromGermanintoEnglish:IrmaandWernerRappl P.U.Z.,d.o.o.,Podjetjezaurejanjezernljisc;RIKOd.o.o.,TEGA CopyEditing:JeffBickert INVESTd.o.o.;TRIMOd.d.;ZILInieniringd.d. Printingandbinding:Gorenjskitisk Printedonacid-freeandchlorine-freebleachedpaper SPIN:12558001 LibraryofCongressControlNumber:2009928421 With475partlycoloredfigures ISBN 978-3-211-99203-6SpringerWienNewYork PhotoCredits ©DamjanGale:15left.24left.25.5'.52left,52right,53left,53 right.54left,55right.58right.63,68.69right.7',81,105.108. 110,I11.117,127,'40,'4'.146.147top. 156.160.164.165. 166.167.168.169.174top,174bottom.176.'77.178.180.181, 182,188,189,'90,'9','92.'93.'94.'95.202,204top.204bot tom.206.208.209.211bottom.214.215.258.261.264.265top. 265bottom.266.267.268,269,270,274,275,344 ©[anezKalisnik:21right,23right,69left.96.120.122,128.129 left.129right,'3',132.'34,136,138.'39.'42.147bottom. 148. '53.260,3,8.3'9.320,321top,321bottom ©MiranKambic:16left.16right,34,35.41left,41middle,41 right,42right.48left,100.101.109.112.113.114.115.1161eft. 119.126.130 ©Vladimir- BracoMusic:33left,33middle,33right.40right, 44right,48right,57left.57right,58left.59.102.106,107left. 107right.116right.118 ©DusanSkrlep:l45.150top,'52,155 ©DamjanPrelovsek,DESSAArchives:43middle Contents 7 Preface 203 Ferantovvrt ResidentialandCommercial OverlappingTerritories:On Situating Complex,Ljubljana EdvardRavnikar(W]. R.Curtis) 217 Tronchetto,Solving theVeniceRegion Complex, 11 Introduction(A. Vodopivec,R.Znidariic) Italy 225 Hotel Maestral,Przno,Montenegro ESSAYS 233 SkopjeCompetitionSubmission,Macedonia 15 EdvardRavnikar's Architecture:Locally 243 Buildingforthe CentralCommitteeofthe AdjustedModernism(A. Vodopivec) CommunistPartyofMacedonia,Skopje 33 Abstractionand Representation; 247 SkopjeTownHall,Skopje,Macedonia The MemorialComplexatKampor,on the Island ofRab(1952-53) byEdvard 253 Espoo CityCentre,Finland Ravnikar(W]. R.Curtis) 259 Hotel Creina,Kranj 51 Claddingthe City,EdvardRavnikar's Archiculture(B.Podrecca) 271 GlobusDepartmentStore,Kranj 57 Archaic,i.e.Modern(L.Semerani) WRITINGSBYEDVARD RAVNIKAR 61 On aQuotationfrom EdvardRavnikar (F. Achleitner) 282 TraditionalArchitectureinYugoslavia 67 Meetingswith EdvardRavnikar (F.Kurrent) 285 Children'sDrawings 291 On the StudyofArchitecture BUILDINGSANDPROJECTS 294 FineArts and NewArchitecture 75 TheModernGallery,Ljubljana 295 Architecture,Sculptureand Painting 89 Regulation ofNovaGorica 310 LeCorbusier(1887-1965) 97 Hostages'Cemetery,Draga nearBegunje 314 ThePresenceofPsychologicalAspects inDesign 103 TheRabMemorialComplex,Kampor, Rab 322 SimpleArchitectureand the High ScienceofTown Planning 121 TheMunicipalityBuilding,Kranj 325 TheVitalityofPlecnik'sNeo-Classicism 135 LjudskapravicaPrintWorks,Ljubljana 333 Nova Goricaafter 35Years 143 NationalBankSRS,Kranj 149 NationalBank,Celje 340 Chronologyof Works 157 Layout ofTheRevolutionSquare,Ljubljana 344 Biographies 183 Cankarjevdorn, Culturaland Congress Centre,Ljubljana 197 Przno- Sv.Stefan,Montenegro Williamf.R.Curtis Preface OverlappingTerritories:OnSituatingEdvardRavnikar Thearchitectureand thoughtofEdvardRavnikar cannotbereduced tosimplisticschemes ofhistorical development. Born inSloveniain 1907,hebelonged tothe samegenerationas Carlo Scarpa inItalyand LuisBarragan inMexico,uniquefigureswho likehim inheritedthe discoveriesofthe modern masters and translatedthem todeal with the realitiesand myths of their respective places,timesand societies.When Ravnikarwasachild, Sloveniawasstillpart ofthe Austro-Hungarianempire but for most ofhisadult lifeafterthe secondworld war itwas asocialistrepublic within the federation ofYugoslavia.Ravnikar believedthatarchitecture and urbanismshouldimprove existence forthe majority,but remainedalooffrom official socialistdoctrines, maintainingalongtermperspectiveon both art and the humancondition. Hetranscendedthe ideological stancesofhistime, seekingto expressmore enduringsymbols through aresonantabstraction.Acommittedmodernarchitect,he neverceasedtolookto the past,transformingitinhisown terms.Amaster ofstructure,constructionand craft,heinsisted upon the importanceoftherealmofideas.Aprofessional dedicated toarchitecturalpractice, healsolikedtowrite,paintandexpresshisimaginationin drawings.Amanysidedartistwith abroadintellectualand visualculture,Ravnikarwasaremarkableteacherwho transmitted not justtechnicaland aesthetic skillsbutalsoethicalvaluesinthe hopethatayoungergeneration might extendtheseinafreshandcriticalway. TheintellectualgeographyofRavnikar'smind correspondedtosomedegree tothe historical complexityofhishomeland,Slovenia-asmallcountrystandingbetween mountainsand sea,between centralEuropeand the Mediterranean,between Slav,Germanicand Latinareas ofinfluence.Helivedmost ofhislifein the capital, Ljubljana, aplacewhich had almost the characterofaminiaturecitystate,amicrocosmofakind.Buthewasabletodevelop and expandhisarchitecturewithin the largerpolitical sphere and socialexperimentofYugoslavia. While attentive toaprogressive ethosand to technologicalchange,henever lostsight ofthe importanceofcollectivememoryandciviccontinuity.Ravnikar'sarchitecturewasformed from fragments ofanoldworld and the promiseofanewone.Hisoutlookcombinedasensitivity to localdifferencesinthe Balkans, even tovaguelydefined notionsofSioveniannationalidentity, with aquestforuniversalityinallmattersofart and thought. IfRavnikar'sspiritualmentorIoze Plecnik defined some ofthe termsofhisformation - classicismand thevernacular,symbolism and materiality,structuralinventivenessand craft,multivalent imagesreferringtooverlapping cultures-Picassoand LeCorbusierwerehisconstant guidesinhissearch foranappropriate modernity. Ravnikar'sown educationbegan inVienna inthe 1920Sand continuedinLjubljana where thesomewhattraditionalistposition ofPlecniksuppliedanalternativeto'functionalist' tendenciesofthe time. From hismentor heinheritedaloftyidealofarchitecture asanartistic andsymbolicexpression.Ravnikar'sversionofmodernismcombinedan intellectualinheritance from the Vienna ofthe beginningofthe twentiethcenturywith more recent avant-garde tendencies inavarietyofcentresincludingParis.Atthe end ofthe1930S heworked inthe atelierofLeCorbusierexecutingsomesuperbdrawingsforone ofthe projectsforAlgiers. IPreface LeCorbusiershowedhow the visualarts, architectureand urbanism might contributeto socialtransformation,and revealed furtherwaysbywhich amodernarchitecturemightdraw upon thepast.Against the turbulentpolitical backgroundofthe secondworld warand the emergenceofmodernYugoslaviainthe 1940Sand 1950S,Ravnikarwasabletocrystallise a personalpositionand to definean architecturallanguage.Mostofhisbuildingsweredesigned forasocialist societybut hewaswaryofmaterialistdogmas and believedthatarchitectureisa discipline with adegree ofautonomy. In the ensuingdecades uptohisdeath in 1993,Ravnikar's architecturalproductionreflected anacceleratedindustrialisation.Earlyinhiscareer hedrew lessonsfrom awidevariety ofsources from Aaltoand Nordic modernismtoTerragni and Italian Rationalism.Lateron Ravnikar wascertainlyawareofcontemporarytendenciesin architectureabroadbut heassiduouslyavoided fashion, evenusingthe distancesuppliedbythe marginalityofYugoslaviatopursuehismain guidingthemes in relativeisolation. ForRavnikar oneofthe basicsocial functions ofarchitecturewasthe formal expression of collectivebeliefs.Inpost warYugoslaviathe staterequiredpublic monumentsand here hewas inhiselement. Hehad workedon Plecnik'sNational and University Library in Ljubljanainthe latethirtiesthen executed hisown design forthe ModernGallery inthe samecityin 1940.A witness tothe collapseofempires,tothe aspirationsofnewstatesand tothe disasters ofwar, Ravnikar wasacutelyawareofthe impactofworld forcesupon the faultlinesofthe Balkans. Heunderstoodthe roleofmonumentalityin representinginstitutionsand inanchoringthe fluxofepicevents.Ravnikar'spost warpublic buildingssuch asthe CouncilAssemblyBuilding in Kranj (1958-60) or the Revolution (later Republic) Square ComplexinLjubljana(1961-83) demonstratehiscommitmentto civicsymbolismand the public realm.Hisdesigns forwar memorialsinplacessuch asDraga (1952), Begunje(1952-3) or the island ofRab (1952-3) revealhismasteryofthe basicsofarchitecture,hiscontrolofspace,hisunderstandingofstone construction,hissensitivity tolandscape,hissenseofthe tragic dimension inhumanaffairsand hissubtle useofabstraction inexpressing acomplex contentinmaterialsand forms. Ravnikar wished to interpretcontemporaryrealitiesbut wasnonethelessdrawn toarchetypesin the Mediterraneanworld.Forhim there wasno contradictionbetweenthe bestofmodernismand what hethoughtofasessentials ofclassicism. ForRavnikar architecturewasaboveallanart ofintegration,and many ofhisprojects were based uponsimplestructuralideaswhich revealed metaphoricalpossibilities.Theparabolic masonryroofofthe 'Museum'in the MemorialComplexatRabisacaseinpoint,asthis symbolic shelter isformed from slenderstone piecesheldtogetherwithoutmortarbyleadclips and hiddensteelcables:the result isatellingyetambiguousrepresentationinsolid materials ofatent orsome otherarchetypalstructure.TheCouncilAssemblyBuildingin Kranjpresents the imageofamonumental'houseofthe people'on the outside, acuriousfusion ofclassical temple and alpine cabin, but realized in modernmaterialssuch asthe reinforcedconcrete frame which holds thewhole thingup,allowingthe floorstosuspendedbelowand the facades tobesuspendedin front. Ravnikarabsorbedsome ofGottfriedSemper'sideason structure and claddingfrom Plecnikwho exploredthe meaningand tectonicexpression ofmasonry, but Ravnikarwasincreasinglyconcernedinthe 1960sand 1970Swith newtechniquesof constructionand facingbased uponthe possibilities ofconcreteskeletons and frames. Inworks such asthe Hotel Creinain Kranjof1968-70heresortedto adramaticdisplayofconcrete cantileveredbeams combinedwith ornamentalpatternsofbrick infilling,while inother IPreface projectsofthe sameperiodheused rustedsteelor ceramics inwovenpatternsinthe curtain walls,ratherlikesolidifiedtextiles.Inthis pathtowards greater thinnessinthe skin offramed buildingsRavnikar sometimeserredin the directionofamannerisedfussinessatodds with the heroic power ofhisearlymasonrymonuments. In hisroleasaProfessor atthe LjubljanaSchoolofArchitecture,where hefollowedin the footsteps ofPlecnik, Ravnikar insisted on the importanceoftown and countryplanning, not asarid statistical exercises(althoughhedid encourageaspirit ofscientificanalysis)but asbasicallyarchitecturalactivities requiringspatial intelligence, asense oftopographyand climate,and asensitivity tobothsocialpatternsand historicalcontext. He reprimanded technocraticmodernistsfortheirbrutalinterventionsand soughtinsteadafusion ofcivic spaceand buildings,sometimesintegratingartificial landscapeand architecture.Thisapproach showsmost clearlyinthe unfinishedproject foratouristcomplex (Sv.Stefan-Milocer-Przno) proposedin 1964forastunningcoastal siteinMontenegrooverlookingtheAdriatic. Ineffect Ravnikar blendedthe scheme into the landscapebytreatingitasaseriesofhorizontalstrata perforatedhere and therebyMediterraneanvegetation. Ravnikar wasattentive tothe urban grain,scaleand open spacesoftraditionaltowns and hopedthatitmightbepossibleto translate some ofthese qualities into amodernurban architecturebased upontechnicalstandardisation and geometricalsystemsoforder.There aresome loose parallelswith the urbanisticaims ofarchitectsofTeamTenatthe time but intruth Ravnikar had been concernedwith such questionslongbefore.TheMontenegro project isnot the onlyone byRavnikar where one feels the influence ofAlvarAalto'sabstracturbanlandscapeswith theirerodedpatios and cascading levelsrecalling aMediterraneanruin. Ravnikar's trajectoryasan individualand asanartistoccurredagainst thebackgroundof vastpolitical upheavals and shifting territorialallegiances.Whenhewasbornin 1907,Slovenia wasstillpartofthe Austro-Hungarianempire. Afterthe firstworld war,itacquiredadegreeof culturalautonomyaspartofthe Kingdom ofthe Serbs,Croats and Slovenes,transformedinto the short-livedKingdom ofYugoslaviain 1929. Duringthe second world waritexperienced Italian Fascistand Naziinvasions, thenboththe struggles forliberationand the civilwars leading to the creationofMarshall Tito'sFederal People'sRepublicofYugoslavia,withinwhich Sloveniahad the status ofasocialist republic. Duringthe coldwarYugoslaviaresisted both the dominationofthe Sovietcommunistblock and thatofthe capitalist westledbythe United States,maintaininganon-alignedpositionalongwith statessuch asIndiaand Egypt.Mostof Ravnikar'sarchitecturalproductionoccurredwithinschemes ofmodernisationestablished byasocialist stateinwhich the publicsectorplayedakeyrolein economicplanningand technologicaldevelopmentbutinwhich there wasno dictatorshipon matters ofarchitectural aestheticsaswasthe caseintheSovietUnion.While art and architecturewereableto flourish with afreedom inconceivable in the communistblock,the statewasmore presentin establishingthe linesofterritorialand socialplanningthan wasthe caseinwestern Europe. Ravnikar livedjustlongenoughtoexperiencethe gradualliberalisationofYugoslaviabut also itsfragmentation and descent into civilwar.Bythe time hedied in 1993,Sloveniahad achieved independenceasademocraticrepublic with astrongorientationtowards the EuropeanUnion but with allthe risksofcapitalist privatisationon the horizon. Thegeneral histories and narrativesofmodernarchitecturearefarmore influencedby geo-politicalrealitiesthanisusuallyadmitted.ItwasonlyafterFranco'sdeath in 1975 and I Preface Spain'sadmissiontothe camp of'acceptable' democraciesthat attentionwasdevotedtosuch enigmaticfiguresasAlejandrodelaSota (1912-95) who had developed anuanced modernism fullofsubtle allusions tothe past inthe 1950S,sometimesinthe service ofaright wing, statist model ofmodernisation(e.g.the GobiernoCivil,Tarragona, 1957).Thearchitectureof Yugoslaviainthe sameperiod-thatofRavnikar's earlymaturity- wasalsoignoredinthe west but foralmost oppositereasons stemmingfrom ideological caricaturesofthevisualculture ofleftwing,socialist countries.Theavant-gardistprejudices ofthe 'freeworld' rejected art forms contaminatedin anywaybythe socialist realism or heavyhandedstaterhetoricofthe communistworld, treatingthemasautomaticallyretrogradeinartisticterms. Ithasbeen some time sinceYugoslaviafellapartand sincethe Berlin wallcamedown but stillrelativelylittle hasbeen done toaccomodatethe complexitiesofmodernarchitecturaldevelopmentinthe former 'eastern block: Non-alignedYugoslaviaoffersan interestingexception,aunique,mixed modelofmodernisation within which avariety ofarchitecturaltendencieswasableto develop. Atypicalfiguressuch asEdvard Ravnikar,who infactavoided statedogmas, stillneed tobe asessedagainst thisbackgroundthensituatedwithinbroader, more internationalschemes of modernarchitectural history. Todaythere aredangers ofanotherkindwhich riskdistortingthe reappraisalofEdvard Ravnikar'scontribution.ThenewdemocraticSloveniaseesitselfaspartofwestern Europe. Thosewho promotefreeenterprisetendtolookback upon theTito yearsofYugoslaviaasones ofstiflingdictatorshipand excessive,centralisedstate control. Theypossibly under-ratethe progress made bythe publicsector ineducation,healthand cultureduringthe peaceful years ofthe Yugoslavconsensus,and the effortsatachieving equilibriumbetween countryand city: abalancedform ofdevelopmentnowbeing sacrificed toland speculationand commercialism. Todayarchitecturalcriticismhasallbut abandonedthe socialdimensionand looks upon political ideology asanautomaticdistractionfrom artistic selfexpression -anemphasisupon individualism,iconic buildingsand art forart'ssakewhich surelysayssomethingaboutfree marketcapitalism.Whenwritinghistoryitisbest not toprojectthe assumptionsofthe present on the past. Edvard Ravnikar cannotbesevered from the social,political and geographical contextinwhich heworked,even ifhedid liveintensionwith some ofthe architectural normsand political positionsofhistime.Inhisbestworks (and here Ithinkofthe Memorial Complexon Rabof1952-3 inparticular)hemanagedto respondtotragic historicalevents, tostir existentialquestions,evento evokeatimeless dimension inpowerfulabstractforms. Thechallenge when dealing with afigurelikeRavnikar istostrike the right balance between hisuniqueartistic contributionand the complex world inwhich heworked. Itisnecessary to reconstructthe overlappingterritoriesand shiftingboundariesofthe past and tosituate the architect's work within them,examiningbuildingsand ideasinthe light ofbothmodernand earlier traditions. Copyright:William f.R.Curtis, August2009. 10 IPreface 1 Introduction With the exceptionofIozePlecnik'sarchitecture,Slovenearchitectureisalmost unknown in the world,similar to the architectureofex-EasternBloccountries,which isakind ofhuge greyspoton the world map ofmodernart and architecture. Abroad the discovery ofPlecnik waslargelyaconsequenceofinterest inhistoricismsduringthe eraofpost-modernism.This isakind ofparadoxforanyone familiar with hisarchitecture. On the otherhand,the work ofEdvard Ravnikar,the mostimportantrepresentative ofSlovenemodernarchitecture,is littleknown withininternationalprofessional circlesdespite the factthat Ravnikar became an undisputedarchitecturalauthorityforthe entireareaofYugoslaviasoonafterWWII. His biographyisdistinguished byaseriesoffirstprizes in competitionsforthe mostimportant nationalprojects, togetherwith earlyrealisations that combinethe principlesofmodern architecturewith traditionalelements ofconstruction,hispioneeringroleinthe developmentof urban planning,over 200publishedarticles and, aboveall,hisuniquepersonaland pedagogical charisma. Ravnikar neverpaid anyattention tohispersonalpromotionor tothe documentingand preservationofhiswork. Hisdesigns,sketches,drawings and writingremainedwhere he worked- athishome, atthe architectureschool, invarious architecturalofficesand design institutions.Hiswork isstillnot collected and archived inone place.On the occasion ofthe ioo'"anniversaryofhisbirth,inDecember2007,the FacultyofArchitecturepreparedan internationalsymposiumand exhibition ofRavnikar'swork in collaborationwith the Ambient architecturalofficeand the ArchitectureMuseumofLjubljana.Thisexhibitionpresented, forthe firsttime,the originaldesigns,drawings,working drawings, models,photographsand paintings kept inthe above-mentionedinstitutionsand served asanopportunitytocreateamonograph ofEdvard Ravnikar'slifework. Themonographconsistsofthree parts.Thefirstpartisacollectionofpapers thatshed light on Ravnikar'swork in the contextofzothcenturyarchitecture.Thesecond part consists ofRavnikar's most importantwork,togetherwith photographs,designsand personal sketches accompaniedbyhisowndescriptionsin caseswhere theyexisted or wereavailable.Thelastpart comprisesaselection ofRavnikar'stextsthatmirrorthe breadthofhisinterests. Wewould liketoexpressourgratitudeto the manywho helped duringthe process of publishingthisbook.Aboveallwewould liketothankarchitectMajda Kregar,Prof.Ravnikars ex-studentand long-termcollaborator,who wasmost helpful incollecting and documenting the bodyofhiscreativeoutputfrom the Ambient architectural office.Hergreat engagement, sensitivity and knowledge made possible the presentingofRavnikarswork tothe public,firstin the form ofanexhibitionand nowinamonograph. Wewould liketothankallthosewho allowedusaccesstotheirphotographicarchivesand made them availableforuseherein. Thegreatest partofthe photographicmaterialisfrom the estateofDamjanGale,which wasgenerouslymade accessibleto usbyhiswidow Zmaga Gale. SpecialthanksgotoZlata Kalisnikforgrantingusthe useofher latehusbandIanezKalisnik's vastand extremelyvaluablebody ofphotographicdocumentation.Part ofthe material that is kept in the Architecture MuseumofLjubljanawascollected and editedbyBogoZupancicwith the assistance ofMartinaMalesic, IIntroduction

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Ravnikar, 1907 1993, is considered the central figure in Slovenia s post-WWII architecture. He was Joze Plecnik s most famous student. Plecnik studied under Otto Wagner. Ravnikar worked for Le Corbusier in Paris as of 1939 after completing his studies in 1935. His thorough planning reflects Plecnik
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