ANN 04.09.2001

PER: CENTROPA. Journal of central European architecture and related arts

Peter Chametzky

CENTROPA, a journal of central European architecture and related arts,
is published tri-annually.

Editor: Dora Wiebenson

Book Review Editors: Peter Chametzky and Eva Forgacs

Board of Advisors: Wojciech Ba us, Barry Bergdoll, Milka Bliznakov,
Thomas Da Costa Kaufmann, Andres Ferkai, Gza Hajos, Carol Krinsky,
Steven Mansbach, Stefan Muthesius, Anca Oroveanu, Jacek Purchla,
Jozsef Sisa, Jind ich Vyb¡ral.

CENTROPA is the first English-language journal to examine the cultural
and historical legacies from all chronological periods of central
European countries as a product of both their unique development and
of their interaction with other nations.

The journal consists of thematic issues devoted to architecture, urban
planning, landscape design, painting, architectural decoration,
sculpture, and preservation. The articles are prepared by scholars
from both central Europe and the West.

Subscriptions and information on submissions to:

CENTROPA, 250 Mercer St. B-1601, New York, NY, 10012
Phone (212) 477-6385; FAX: (212) 475-7047

Current Issue

Volume I No. 3, Sept. 2001: Modernism and Nationalism, Postmodernism
and Postnationalism?, co-edited by Peter Chametzky and Anna Brzyski.
Contents: Liebermann and Uhde: A Case for German Identity, Marsha
Morton; Between the Nation and the World: Nationalism and the
Emergence of Polish Modern Art, Anna Brzyski; Modernist and Anti-
Modernist Theories of National Art in Latvia During the 1920s and
1930s, Stella Pelse; The Dilemma of Hungarianness and
Internationalism, Eva Forgacs; Neue Slowenische Kunst and the
Semiotics of Suprematism, Myroslava M. Mudrak; Sofia Kulik: from
Warsaw to Cyberia, Sarah G. Wilson. Rebuilding the Past: The
Reichstag Renovation and Jewish Museum Berlin, Peter Chametzky;
Reviews: Jan Cavanaugh, Out Looking In: Early Modern Polish Art, 1890-
1918, reviewed by Joanna Inglot; Werner Hofmann, Wie deutsch ist die
deutsche Kunst? Eine Streitschrift, reviewed by David Ehrenpreis.

Forthcoming

Volume II No. 1: Signals From The Periphery; National Romanticism:
Finland and Central Europe; guest editor, Pekka Korvenmaa. Contents:
Introduction: A Voice from the North, Finnish Architecture in the
Context of Central Europe at the Beginning of the 20th Century, Pekka
Korvenmaa; National Romanticism in Estonia, Karin Hallas; Art
Nouveau in Latvia and Finland, Points of Contact, Jinis Krastin ;
Hungary and Finland at the Turn of the Century, Anita
Poletti-Anderson; Lodz A Periphery in the Center of Europe, Krysztof
Stefanski.

Volume II No. 2, May 2002: Semper and Central Europe; Contents:
Semper and Bohemian Architecture, Jind ich Vyb¡ral; Gottfried Semper
and Hungary and Architectural History and Museology in Hungary,
Jozsef Sisa; The Limits of Influence: Semper and Poland Wojciech Ba
us; Semper and Belgrade, Tanja Damlanovic.

Volume II No. 3, September 2002: New Nations: Architecture of the
Imagination; Contents: The Image of Sarajevo: a Moving Target,
Dijana Ali and Carol Bertram; Frigyes Feszl: sketches, Jozsef Sisa;
To National Identity from Historic Architecture, Mart Kalm;
Lithuania Between Modernity and Tradition, Giedri Jankevi �ti;
Polish Vernacular Art, Rafal Solewski.

Back Issues

Volume I No. 1: 19th Century Central European City Plans;
Introduction: Remarks on Some 19th Century Central European City
Plans, Dora Wiebenson; Articles: Brno, Pavel Zatloukal; Budapest,
Jozsef Sisa; Cracow, Wojciech Ba us; Prague, Jind ich Vyb¡ral;
Riga, Jinis Kristin ; Sofia, Petar Iokimov and Ljubinka Stoilova;
Szeged, G bor Winkler; Timi oara, Ileana Pintilie Teleaga; Zagreb,
Mladen and Bojana Bojani Obad itaroci. Reviews: Shaping the Great
City: Modern Architecture in Central Europe, 1890-1937 edited by Eve
Blau and Monika Platzer, reviewed by Paula Fichtner; The City in
Central Europe: Culture and Society From 1800 to the Present edited
by Malcolm Gee, Tim Kirk, and Jill Steward, reviewed by Stefan
Muthesius.

Volume I No. 2: Soviet Ideology and Central Europe; Articles:
Socialist Realism and Built Nationalism in the Cold War Battle of the
Styles , Greg Castillo; The Beacons of Revolutionary Ideas: Sorela
as Historicism and Rhetoric, Vyb¡ral; Monuments and Ideologies, J n
Bako ; Baltic Shores, Western Winds: Lithuanian Architects and the
Subversion of the Soviet Norm, John Maciuika; Stalinism Meets
Gothic: A Case Study of Some Post-World War II Architecture in the Old
Town of Tallinn, Mart Kalm; The Bulgarian Search for a National in
Form and Socialist in Content Architecture, Milka Bliznakov;
Russian Emigrant Architects in Yugoslavia (1918-1941), Aleksandar
Kadijevi and Marina Djurdjevi. Appendix: Socialist Realism, Tibor
Wiener; Ideological and Creative Pathway to Bulgarian Architecture,
Boris Markov. Reviews: Munich and Memory: Architecture and the Legacy
of the Third Reich by Gavril Rosenfeld and From Monuments to Traces:
Artifacts of German Memory, 1879-1990 by Rudy Koshar, reviewed by
James A. van Dyke.

Individual subscription: $50 per year (after Dec. 31st, 2001, $65)
Foreign subscription: $55 per year (after Dec. 31st, 2001, $75)
Institutional subscription: $100 per year

Friend: $150 per year
Sponsor: $500 per year
Patron: $1000 per year
Benefactor: $2000 per year

Quellennachweis:
ANN: PER: CENTROPA. Journal of central European architecture and related arts. In: ArtHist.net, 04.09.2001. Letzter Zugriff 25.04.2024. <https://arthist.net/archive/24648>.

^