Published in Lacerba (Florence), August 1, 1914 (originally as catalog introduction to ‘Nuove Tendenze’ show in Milan, July 11, 1914).
This English-language translation COPYRIGHT ©1973 Thames and Hudson Ltd, London. All rights reserved.
Source for translation by Caroline Tisdall reproduced below:
Apollonio, Umbro, ed. Documents of 20th Century Art: Futurist Manifestos. Brain, Robert, R.W. Flint, J.C. Higgitt, and Caroline Tisdall, trans. New York: Viking Press, 1973. 160-172.
Manifesto of Futurist Architecture by Antonio Sant’Elia
No architecture has existed since 1700. A moronic mixture of the most various stylistic elements used to mask the skeletons of modern houses is called modern architecture. The new beauty of cement and iron are profaned by the superimposition of motley decorative incrustations that cannot be justified either by constructive necessity or by our (modern) taste, and whose origins are in Egyptian, Indian or Byzantine antiquity and in that idiotic flowering of stupidity and impotence that took the name of NEOCLASSICISM.
These architectonic prostitutions are welcomed in Italy, and rapacious alien ineptitude is passed off as talented invention and as extremely up-to-date architecture. Young Italian architects (those who borrow originality from clandestine and compulsive devouring of art journals) flaunt their talents in the new quarters of our towns, where a hilarious salad of little ogival columns, seventeenth-century foliation, Gothic pointed arches, Egyptian pilasters, rococo scrolls, fifteenth-century cherubs, swollen caryatids, take the place of style in all seriousness, and presumptuously put on monumental airs. The kaleidoscopic appearance and reappearance of forms, the multiplying of machinery, the daily increasing needs imposed by the speed of communications, by the concentration of population, by hygiene, and by a hundred other phenomena of modern life, never cause these self-styled renovators of architecture a moment’s perplexity or hesitation. They persevere obstinately with the rules of Vitruvius, Vignola and Sansovino plus gleanings from any published scrap of information on German architecture that happens to be at hand. Using these, they continue to stamp the image of imbecility on our cities, our cities which should be the immediate and faithful projection of ourselves.
And so this expressive and synthetic art has become in their hands a vacuous stylistic exercise, a jumble of ill-mixed formulae to disguise a run-of-the-mill traditionalist box of bricks and stone as a modern building. As if we who are accumulators and generators of movement, with all our added mechanical limbs, with all the noise and speed of our life, could live in streets built for the needs of men four, five or six centuries ago.
This is the supreme imbecility of modern architecture, perpetuated by the venal complicity of the academies, the internment camps of the intelligentsia, where the young are forced into the onanistic recopying of classical models instead of throwing their minds open in the search for new frontiers and in the solution of the new and pressing problem: THE FUTURIST HOUSE AND CITY. The house and the city that are ours both spiritually and materially, in which our tumult can rage without seeming a grotesque anachronism.
The problem posed in Futurist architecture is not one of linear rearrangement. It is not a question of finding new moldings and frames for windows and doors, of replacing columns, pilasters and corbels with caryatids, flies and frogs. Neither has it anything to do with leaving a façade in bare brick, or plastering it, or facing it with stone or in determining formal differences between the new building and the old one. It is a question of tending the healthy growth of the Futurist house, of constructing it with all the resources of technology and science, satisfying magisterially all the demands of our habits and our spirit, trampling down all that is grotesque and antithetical (tradition, style, aesthetics, proportion), determining new forms, new lines, a new harmony of profiles and volumes, an architecture whose reason for existence can be found solely in the unique conditions of modern life, and in its correspondence with the aesthetic values of our sensibilities. This architecture cannot be subjected to any law of historical continuity. It must be new, just as our state of mind is new.
The art of construction has been able to evolve with time, and to pass from one style to another, while maintaining unaltered the general characteristics of architecture, because in the course of history changes of fashion are frequent and are determined by the alternations of religious conviction and political disposition. But profound changes in the state of the environment are extremely rare, changes that unhinge and renew, such as the discovery of natural laws, the perfecting of mechanical means, the rational and scientific use of material. In modern life the process of stylistic development in architecture has been brought to a halt. ARCHITECTURE NOW MAKES A BREAK WITH TRADITION. IT MUST PERFORCE MAKE A FRESH START.
Calculations based on the resistance of materials, on the use of reinforced concrete and steel, exclude ‘architecture’ in the classical and traditional sense. Modern constructional materials and scientific concepts are absolutely incompatible with the disciplines of historical styles, and are the principal cause of the grotesque appearance of “fashionable” buildings in which attempts are made to employ the lightness, the superb grace of the steel beam, the delicacy of reinforced concrete, in order to obtain the heavy curve of the arch and the bulkiness of marble.
The utter antithesis between the modern world and the old is determined by all those things that formerly did not exist. Our lives have been enriched by elements the possibility of whose existence the ancients did not even suspect. Men have identified material contingencies, and revealed spiritual attitudes, whose repercussions are felt in a thousand ways. Principal among these is the formation of a new ideal of beauty that is still obscure and embryonic, but whose fascination is already felt even by the masses. We have lost our predilection for the monumental, the heavy, the static, and we have enriched our sensibility with a taste for the light, the practical, the ephemeral and the swift. We no longer feel ourselves to be the men of the cathedrals, the palaces and the podiums. We are the men of the great hotels, the railway stations, the immense streets, colossal ports, covered markets, luminous arcades, straight roads and beneficial demolitions.
We must invent and rebuild the Futurist city like an immense and tumultuous shipyard, agile, mobile and dynamic in every detail; and the Futurist house must be like a gigantic machine. The lifts must no longer be hidden away like tapeworms in the niches of stairwells; the stairwells themselves, rendered useless, must be abolished, and the lifts must scale the lengths of the façades like serpents of steel and glass. The house of concrete, glass and steel, stripped of paintings and sculpture, rich only in the innate beauty of its lines and relief, extraordinarily “ugly” in its mechanical simplicity, higher and wider according to need rather than the specifications of municipal laws. It must soar up on the brink of a tumultuous abyss: the street will no longer lie like a doormat at ground level, but will plunge many stories down into the earth, embracing the metropolitan traffic, and will be linked up for necessary interconnections by metal gangways and swift-moving pavements.
THE DECORATIVE MUST BE ABOLISHED. The problem of Futurist architecture must be resolved, not by continuing to pilfer from Chinese, Persian or Japanese photographs or fooling around with the rules of Vitruvius, but through flashes of genius and through scientific and technical expertise. Everything must be revolutionized. Roofs and underground spaces must be used; the importance of the façade must be diminished; issues of taste must be transplanted from the field of fussy moldings, finicky capitals and flimsy doorways to the broader concerns of BOLD GROUPINGS AND MASSES, and LARGE-SCALE DISPOSITION OF PLANES. Let us make an end of monumental, funereal and commemorative architecture. Let us overturn monuments, pavements, arcades and flights of steps; let us sink the streets and squares; let us raise the level of the city.
I COMBAT AND DESPISE:
- All the pseudo-architecture of the avant-garde, Austrian, Hungarian, German and American;
- All classical architecture, solemn, hieratic, scenographic, decorative, monumental, pretty and pleasing;
- The embalming, reconstruction and reproduction of ancient monuments and palaces;
- Perpendicular and horizontal lines, cubical and pyramidical forms that are static, solemn, aggressive and absolutely excluded from our utterly new sensibility;
- The use of massive, voluminous, durable, antiquated and costly materials.
AND PROCLAIM:
- That Futurist architecture is the architecture of calculation, of audacious temerity and of simplicity; the architecture of reinforced concrete, of steel, glass, cardboard, textile fiber, and of all those substitutes for wood, stone and brick that enable us to obtain maximum elasticity and lightness;
- That Futurist architecture is not because of this an arid combination of practicality and usefulness, but remains art, i.e. synthesis and expression;
- That oblique and elliptic lines are dynamic, and by their very nature possess an emotive power a thousand times stronger than perpendiculars and horizontals, and that no integral, dynamic architecture can exist that does not include these;
- That decoration as an element superimposed on architecture is absurd, and that the decorative value of Futurist architecture depends solely on the use and original arrangement of raw or bare or violently colored materials;
- That, just as the ancients drew inspiration for their art from the elements of nature, we—who are materially and spiritually artificial—must find that inspiration in the elements of the utterly new mechanical world we have created, and of which architecture must be the most beautiful expression, the most complete synthesis, the most efficacious integration;
- That architecture as the art of arranging forms according to pre-established criteria is finished;
- That by the term architecture is meant the endeavor to harmonize the environment with Man with freedom and great audacity, that is to transform the world of things into a direct projection of the world of the spirit;
- From an architecture conceived in this way no formal or linear habit can grow, since the fundamental characteristics of Futurist architecture will be its impermanence and transience. THINGS WILL ENDURE LESS THAN US. EVERY GENERATION MUST BUILD ITS OWN CITY. This constant renewal of the architectonic environment will contribute to the victory of Futurism which has already been affirmed by WORDS-IN-FREEDOM, PLASTIC DYNAMISM, MUSIC WITHOUT QUADRATURE AND THE ART OF NOISES, and for which we fight without respite against traditionalist cowardice.



Hi Jessica!
I’m Leo, the italian comicbook artist, do you remember of me?
This blog is very cool and interesting!
Nice job!
Cheers!
Great. I love how the poliziotto takes a photo. The Trevi Fountain stun was cooler. I suppose the question is, which came first – this, or the Sony commercial?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YvgXXazRGHQ
I think I’d go for the Alcoholic Joust. Fire In The Mouth sounds a bit much.
I volunteered during PERFORMA 07, and while I got to take part in Yvonne Rainer’s “Ros Indexical” at the Hudson Theatre (where I saw Baryshnikov for the first time), and helped consruct a rectangular, roofless igloo in Cooper Square, I also had to sit through a lot of stuff which was at best ridiculous nonsense (He Yunchang’s naked “Mahjong”), at worst pretentious and lazy drivel (Ulla Von Brandenburg’s “La Maison”). Let’s hope PERFORMA 09’s more defined manifesto weeds out some of the lesser works ensuring a more coherent event.
Futurist Nikes? Personally I still prefer Marty McFly’s…
http://www.mcfly2015.com/
Well, how did it go?
Locals in Vigevano say the town’s long main square is Italy’s second most beautiful piazza after “Il Campo” in Siena — suggesting its inhabitants are proud but also realistic. I went to Vigevano a few times when I was living in Pavia, and while it is a nice baroque square (with an arcade running on three sides), I can think of a couple more piazze in Rome that would shunt it even further down the list.
Nice to hear that Futurism will be honored in the USA. Is it too late to participate in this annual conference? My interest in Futurism is limitless and I could propose a paper about Futurism in America 1915-1955. Please let me know Best to you. Dr. Jean-Pierre Andreoli-de Villers, University of Windsor.
I suppose that the city has never gotten over Marinetti, Boccioni, Carra and Russolo’s manifesto of April 27, 1910, “Contro Venezia passatista”.
Vuoi consultare il programma della manifestazione FUTUROMA comodamente sul cellulare a COSTO ZERO?
Collegati alla pagina
http://www.funweek.it/Home/Futuroma/?m=150
e scarica l’applicazione java dedicata al Futurismo con tutti gli eventi della manifestazione.
Il serivzio è totalmente gratuito!
Hi Jessica,
Happy Centenary. In honour of the celebration, we hereby share a small update on Thames & Hudson 1973 sloppy historiography and piss-poor translation.
Thames & Hudson 1973 claim, that the following is Marinetti’s seminal moment of conception of Futurism when his car overturns into a ditch,
“I gulped down your nourishing sludge; and I remembered the blessed black BEAST of my Sudanese nurse… ”
Alert readers will sense something wrong: reference to a wet-nurse is more likely to refer to a BREAST, not a beast. I checked the original; and indeed, Marinetti wrote ‘MAMELLE’ (in English: breast, mammary)
Original French text:
http://www.italianfuturism.org/fondation-et-manifeste-du-futurisme/
Reading the French, I was even more astounded the original is so much more sensual and full of graphic erotic detail,
“J’ai savouré a pleine bouche ta boue fortifiante qui me rappelle la sainte MAMELLE noire de ma nourrice soudanaise!”
A far more accurate translation of that would be:
“I SAVOURED FULLY IN MY MOUTH your fortifying mud that recalled to me the sacred black breast of my Sudanese wet-nurse.”
With an eye to historic, artistic, social and poetic purpose (not to mention transparency, critical integrity, and avoiding intentional malignance or negligent demeaning aspersion on Sudanese and female breasts), it’s fair to say ‘beast’ evokes vastly different connotations than ‘breast.’
(And make no mistake: there’re many good French words for beast, like ‘bête’ or ‘fauve’; certainly not ‘mamelle’.)
With an eye to Marinetti’s disdain of consider the irony of the translators and their times. It’s not impossible in 1973 that Thames & Hudson was still labouring under such extreme prurience that it could not bring itself to put into print such FUTURIST words as, well, ‘ breast’. T&H may have consciously explicitly chosen a well-serving typo and/or unconsciously been guided by prurience.
In all events, best wishes to one & all for a fulfilling futurist centenary.
In occasione del Centenario della pubblicazione del primo manifesto futurista, NetFuturismo ha steso e pubblicato sul sito http://www.netfuturismo.it il manifesto DOBBIAMO UCCIDERE IL FUTURISMO!, l’unica risposta credibile per rilanciare lo spirito futurista nel XXI secolo. Contro il recupero passatista del Futurismo del secolo scorso, contro il vuoto presentista delle attuali proposte avanguardistiche, NetFuturismo propone di aggiornare il Futurismo alla luce della rivoluzione neotecnologica in atto. Per questo motivo è necessario in primo luogo scrollarsi di dosso il ricordo nostalgico delle sperimentazioni futuriste, sperimentazioni adatte al mondo di 100 anni fa, non certo al nostro. Chiunque abbia compreso davvero la portata del messaggio del Futurismo, chiunque ami il Futurismo, oggi deve ucciderlo.
http://www.netfuturismo.it
Happy Centenary! Have been thinking of you all day — wish I could have gotten over to MoMA to mark the occasion!
http://www.bdgest.com/critiques/images/couv/72401.jpg
I expect photos.
Visit http://www.marchesacasati.com/ the official site of Futurist muse the Marchesa Luisa Casati.
Love the shoes… and the site’s new look!
Thanks for the shout-out JP! Can you divulge any on what might constitute Futurist wine?
Ci mancherai…LUCE
e con te tutti i futuristi che già se ne sono andati_ purtroppo.
Andrea Carlo Alpini
Alberto Rusconi
Andrea Galli
Mercoledì 24 giugno 2009
ORE 10.11
CIMITERO MONUMENTALE, Milano
CAMPO IV
di fronte
Tomba F.T. Marinetti
21 SECONDI DI SILENZIO PER LUCE
Andrea Carlo Alpini
Alberto Rusconi
Andrea Galli
eseguiranno il “Silenzio” per la recente scomparsa di LUCE MARINETTI,
ultima futurista vivente che ci ha lasciato nel giorno del Solstizio d’estate, il 21 giugno 2009.
A seguire saranno proposti quattro brani futuristi:
L U C E
Poema e pianto per FT Marinetti
Rossi guanti di velluto
Figlia del cielo
un atto dovuto…
visto l’eredità che ci hanno lasciato, e la passione con cui continuiamo la loro opera…
Gent. Jessica Palmieri,
Vorrei segnalare agli studiosi di futurismo la raccolta di opere digitalizzate della Collezione ‘900 Sergio Reggi, che è pubblicata sul nostro sito del Centro Apice (Archivi della Parola, dell’Immagine e della Comunicazione editoriale) dell’Università degli Studi di Milano. Si tratta di circa 5000 pagine consultabili tra periodici, opuscoli e manifesti futuristi.
Ringraziandola per l’attenzione, invio cordiali saluti,
Valentina Zanchin
hallo Cinema Bizarre fans!!
meine tickets habe ich bei fanfusion.de gekauft!!
bei fanfusion.de findet ihr noch karten für alle konzerte!!
Quite interesting. Nice work done to the palace but without Peggy, something is missing!! I visited this place in the late seventies with Luce Marinetti. It was quite derelict but the art was then fantastic. A few more Futurist pieces, please!. Best. Jean-Pierre de Villers, Windsor.
I am so doing this.
Great idea, Jessica.
Hello, where can I get my hands on this book!!!! Writing my thesis this year on Umberto and would love to have this to add to my work.
Is it english or Italian?
thank you….
Wowza. Anyone who can procure all the ingredients for the More-Less-by-Division is a hero to me…
No Pan Galactic Gargle Blaster? For shame!
I love how there’s a restaurant in Florence called “Ganzo”…
Dear James,
Actually it is not only a restaurant, it is a cultural association of students attending both Apicius International School of Hospitality and Florence University of the Arts.
It is an ACLI association, and yearly membership is available for everybody.
For more information, pls contact: info@ganzoflorence.it or visit the website: http://www.ganzoflorence.it
Tnx and pass by if you wish – Molecular Cuisine is quite an experience…
Thanks for the link back to my blog’s links! I’ll have some more futurist stuff posted in the next few months.
Hello Jessica, I was on your site and on typing manifestoes, I did not see anything between 1916 and 1933 !! A lapse? A technical mishap????? Marinetti is not happy!. Please correct. J.P.
Hello,
Je trouve votre projet fantastique. Bonne continuation.
See you.
It is a strange story. Most of Marinetti’s papers are at Yale. These are easily available for consultation. Those at the Getty seem to be burried in a vault and no copies have been offered to the general public. Something needs to be done, especiallly the notebooks of the very young FTM. Most of the contents should be put on the internet. Free. JpdV
Fried Ilona, Modern olasz irodalom: Problémák, művek, dokumentumok, HEFOP pályázat, ELTE. BTK, Budapest, 2006, pp. 17-25
Fried Ilona, Száz év botrány – a futurizmus, „Élet és Irodalom”, 2009. augusztus 14, p. 17.
Fried Ilona, Sua Eccellenza Presidente. Pirandello and the Convegno Volta, „Pirandello Studies” n° 29, 2009
Fried Ilona, Beszélgessenek Marinettivel! Kiállítások a futurista kiáltvány 100. Évfordulóján,„Criticai Lapok” n° 12, 12/2009, pp. 1-3.
Still the nicest site about Futurism. Maybe you could add a section where people could upload documents about Futurism. I have a mountain of unpublished pages of FTM. Best to you. Jean-Pierre de Villers
ARCHIVIO DELLA DISLOCAZIONE/DISPLACEMENT’S ARCHIVES
Archivio della dislocazione documenta il trasferimento continuo di ognuno di noi. Ai partecipanti al progetto viene richiesto di realizzare fotografie personali nel contesto di altri panorami, esibendo nella mano la cartolina del proprio luogo di provenienza.Displacement’s archives document the continuous transfer of itself. To each of the participants to the project it is in demand to realize photos of itself in the context of various panoramas, exhibiting in the hand the postcard of his/her own place of origin.
ES PRODUZIONI 2009
http://dislocazione.altervista.org
My Father’s brother was Mario Buggelli,can you give me as much information
on him as you can.Thank you.
James Buggelli Houston Texas
Bonjour Jessica. Where in Brooklyn?? Best of best, JPadV University of Windsor, home of the Futurists.
Clinton Hill!