Bruno Zevi
(Rome, 1918- id., January 9, 2000) Italian architect and theorist of architecture.Trained at the Harvard Graduate School of Design, he has been the leading Italian defender and interpreter of the architecture and thought of F.L.Wrigth.His achievements include the Einaudi library, in Dogliani (1962-1963), and that of the Italian pavilion at the Brussels exhibition (1967).They stand out, in his important theoretical work, Towards an organic architecture (1945), Knowing how to see architecture (1948), Architecture and historiography (1974 ) and History of modern architecture (1975).
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