3 research outputs found

    El proyecto de Oskar Hansen para Auschwitz y la monumentalización del debate sobre la guerra

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    La propuesta de Oskar Hansen para el Monumento a las Víctimas del Fascismo en Auschwitz renunciaba a tener una forma inmutable, tanto por la interacción que reclamaba del visitante como por el efecto del paso del tiempo. De esta manera manifestaba su incapacidad para representar el horror provocado por la guerra, y menos aún para explicarlo. Adoptando la forma de un pedestal vacío, lo que verdaderamente pretendía monumentalizar era el debate que debía suscitarse en su superficie, de posiciones cambiantes e incluso contradictorias, pero necesario para evitar el olvido.Oskar Hansen’s proposal for the Memorial to the Victims of Fascism in Auschwitz renounced to have an immutable shape, both because of the interaction it claimed from the visitor and the effect of the passage of time. Devoid of a focus for commemoration and surrounded by remnants of the camp that were meant to acquire a romantic outlook in the future, it proclaimed its inability to depict the horror provoked by the war, let alone to explain it. Its transgressor character aroused the suspicion of the victims, who did not feel themselves represented on Hansen’s empty pedestal. Its novelty was based on shifting the burden of memory from the object ( the traditional monument) to the subject ( the viewer), as Postmodernism would do later, and stimulating critical thinking about the past. But above all, and because of its reluctance to ‘ talk’, it aspired to remain a valid space for remembrance, regardless of the transformations that postwar society’s relationship with the architectural heritage of Nazism went through. This relationship has been swinging like a pendulum over the years, first ignoring or underplaying the symbolic power of these buildings. Later on, when German society felt ready to ‘ come to terms with the past’, almost every trace of Nazism was deemed worthy of preservation, and the birth of the countermonument ( many of which literally replicated the mechanisms that Hansen put in place in Auschwitz) helped to shape a critical review of this period. And finally, it seems that the excess of memory during the last decades of the twentieth century is giving way to the normalization of this legacy as just one more element in the urban landscape. Given the changing nature of these attitudes, rather than a specific response, what Hansen really intended to monumentalize was the debate that should be fostered on the surface of his monument, as an antidote to oblivion

    El proyecto de Oskar Hansen para Auschwitz y la monumentalización del debate sobre la guerra

    No full text
    La propuesta de Oskar Hansen para el Monumento a las Víctimas del Fascismo en Auschwitz renunciaba a tener una forma inmutable, tanto por la interacción que reclamaba del visitante como por el efecto del paso del tiempo. De esta manera manifestaba su incapacidad para representar el horror provocado por la guerra, y menos aún para explicarlo. Adoptando la forma de un pedestal vacío, lo que verdaderamente pretendía monumentalizar era el debate que debía suscitarse en su superficie, de posiciones cambiantes e incluso contradictorias, pero necesario para evitar el olvido.Oskar Hansen’s proposal for the Memorial to the Victims of Fascism in Auschwitz renounced to have an immutable shape, both because of the interaction it claimed from the visitor and the effect of the passage of time. Devoid of a focus for commemoration and surrounded by remnants of the camp that were meant to acquire a romantic outlook in the future, it proclaimed its inability to depict the horror provoked by the war, let alone to explain it. Its transgressor character aroused the suspicion of the victims, who did not feel themselves represented on Hansen’s empty pedestal. Its novelty was based on shifting the burden of memory from the object ( the traditional monument) to the subject ( the viewer), as Postmodernism would do later, and stimulating critical thinking about the past. But above all, and because of its reluctance to ‘ talk’, it aspired to remain a valid space for remembrance, regardless of the transformations that postwar society’s relationship with the architectural heritage of Nazism went through. This relationship has been swinging like a pendulum over the years, first ignoring or underplaying the symbolic power of these buildings. Later on, when German society felt ready to ‘ come to terms with the past’, almost every trace of Nazism was deemed worthy of preservation, and the birth of the countermonument ( many of which literally replicated the mechanisms that Hansen put in place in Auschwitz) helped to shape a critical review of this period. And finally, it seems that the excess of memory during the last decades of the twentieth century is giving way to the normalization of this legacy as just one more element in the urban landscape. Given the changing nature of these attitudes, rather than a specific response, what Hansen really intended to monumentalize was the debate that should be fostered on the surface of his monument, as an antidote to oblivion

    Geometric analysis of a modular, deployable and reusable structure

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    Resumen del trabajo presentado al 2nd ISAMA (International Symposium on Advanced Materials and Application), celebrado del 18 al 20 de enero de 2019 en Seoul (South Korea​).The use of deployable structures has a wide range of applications nowadays. They can be transformed from a closed compact configuration to a predetermined expanded form, in which they are stable and can carry loads. This article describes a sort of deployable structure that has been patented by researchers of two Spanish institutions: San Pablo CEU University and Eduardo Torroja Institute. Geometric aspects are key to accomplish an efficient folding and unfolding procedure along with an optimum structural behavior when the structure is deployed. Tensioned cables are essential in these structures. The main goal is to make the cable acquire its maximum length when the structure is fully deployed. This will avoid complex operations of post-tensioning in order to make the cable perform its function.The work presented in this paper was supported by the project DEployable Structures of MAximum Compactness (DESMAC) granted by San Pablo CEU University
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