The New Brutalism By Reyner Banham Official

The New Brutalism By Reyner Banham Official

Yet Banham’s deeper argument remains urgent. In an age of digital rendering, photorealistic simulation, and cladding that mimics stone, wood, or metal, Banham’s call for an architecture of “what it is” rather than “what it pretends to be” is a powerful corrective. The New Brutalism’s ethic—against aesthetic deception—speaks directly to contemporary debates about material honesty, embodied energy, and the aesthetics of sustainability.

Reyner Banham’s 1966 book, The New Brutalism: Ethic or Aesthetic? , remains the defining manifesto for one of the most misunderstood architectural movements of the 20th century. This paper argues that Banham’s primary intervention was not merely to catalogue a style, but to elevate a nascent architectural attitude into a coherent critical category. By tracing Banham’s argument from its origins in the 1950s Architectural Review to the book’s final form, this analysis demonstrates how Banham distinguished New Brutalism from orthodox Modernism through its tripartite commitment: memorability as an image, a radical honesty of materials , and an aesthetic of “as found” reality. Ultimately, the paper concludes that Banham’s Brutalism was less about raw concrete (béton brut) and more about a moral and intellectual posture against the establishment of the International Style. the new brutalism by reyner banham

The Ethical as the Aesthetic: Reyner Banham’s The New Brutalism and the Making of a Counter-Movement Yet Banham’s deeper argument remains urgent