It is pretty hopeless as a venue for opera, it took years to build, its architect was forced to resign and it was never properly finished inside. None of this matters. The Sydney Opera House, by the reclusive Danish architect Jorn Utzon, is the mother and father of all modern landmark buildings. It has come to define not only a city, but an entire nation and continent.Beyond that, it is a global expression of cultural modernity. Everyone in the world with media access knows what the Sydney Opera House looks like. First designed in 1956 and finally declared completed in 1973, the opera house was the single best known modern building in the world until the arrival of Frank Gehry's equally extraordinary Bilbao Guggenheim in 1997. But it will outlive the Guggenheim as an international architectural icon--because it did all the difficult work tint.In the pantheon(万神殿) of classic modern buildings, Utzon's creation has the status of myth. The myth states that the unknown architect, then in his thirties, submitted rough sketches to the competition judges, that he ignored most of the rules, that his as only selected after being plucked at the last moment from the rejected pile by one of the judges, and that the design was unbuildable.But Sydney is remarkable for another reason: it is a complete one-off. It does not fit into any stylistic or chronological category. None of Utzon's other buildings--churches, government departments, house. looks anything like it, and architects today who try to copy his concept always end up looking very second-rate indeed. It is "modern", certainly, but it is an expressive modernism that was quite at odds with the rectilinear(直线的) "international style" of its time. It has more in common with the work of the American genius Frank Uloyd Wright, for whom Utzon worked briefly. Of course its location is an enormous help, sitting as it does on a promontory with water on three sides and the famous Sydney Harbor Bridge as a picture-postcard backdrop. But Utzon masterly exploited the site as nobody else could.Utzon left Australia in high indignation in 1966, never to return, before he could finish designing the interiors.As with Sir Christopher Wren at St Paul's Cathedral, Utzon was humiliated and removed from overseeing the final stages of his masterwork. But for all his manifold difficulties, which other contemporary architect can claim an equivalent achievement? The Sydney Opera House showed us that anything is possible, and it demonstrated that sheer, seductive beauty for its own sake is nothing to be ashamed of.It can be inferred from the passage that ______.A.the Danish architect Join Utzon totally failed in his design of Sydney Opera House and was forced to resignB.the Danish architect Jorn Utzon has been made known as the founder of all the modern landmark buildings, in spite of his part failure in his design of Sydney Opera HouseC.Sydney Opera House is hopelessly ugly and has never been finished insideD.Sydney Opera House is the single best known modern building in the world up to now

It is pretty hopeless as a venue for opera, it took years to build, its architect was forced to resign and it was never properly finished inside. None of this matters. The Sydney Opera House, by the reclusive Danish architect Jorn Utzon, is the mother and father of all modern landmark buildings. It has come to define not only a city, but an entire nation and continent.

Beyond that, it is a global expression of cultural modernity. Everyone in the world with media access knows what the Sydney Opera House looks like. First designed in 1956 and finally declared completed in 1973, the opera house was the single best known modern building in the world until the arrival of Frank Gehry's equally extraordinary Bilbao Guggenheim in 1997. But it will outlive the Guggenheim as an international architectural icon--because it did all the difficult work tint.

In the pantheon(万神殿) of classic modern buildings, Utzon's creation has the status of myth. The myth states that the unknown architect, then in his thirties, submitted rough sketches to the competition judges, that he ignored most of the rules, that his as only selected after being plucked at the last moment from the rejected pile by one of the judges, and that the design was unbuildable.

But Sydney is remarkable for another reason: it is a complete one-off. It does not fit into any stylistic or chronological category. None of Utzon's other buildings--churches, government departments, house. looks anything like it, and architects today who try to copy his concept always end up looking very second-rate indeed. It is "modern", certainly, but it is an expressive modernism that was quite at odds with the rectilinear(直线的) "international style" of its time. It has more in common with the work of the American genius Frank Uloyd Wright, for whom Utzon worked briefly. Of course its location is an enormous help, sitting as it does on a promontory with water on three sides and the famous Sydney Harbor Bridge as a picture-postcard backdrop. But Utzon masterly exploited the site as nobody else could.

Utzon left Australia in high indignation in 1966, never to return, before he could finish designing the interiors.

As with Sir Christopher Wren at St Paul's Cathedral, Utzon was humiliated and removed from overseeing the final stages of his masterwork. But for all his manifold difficulties, which other contemporary architect can claim an equivalent achievement? The Sydney Opera House showed us that anything is possible, and it demonstrated that sheer, seductive beauty for its own sake is nothing to be ashamed of.

It can be inferred from the passage that ______.

A.the Danish architect Join Utzon totally failed in his design of Sydney Opera House and was forced to resign

B.the Danish architect Jorn Utzon has been made known as the founder of all the modern landmark buildings, in spite of his part failure in his design of Sydney Opera House

C.Sydney Opera House is hopelessly ugly and has never been finished inside

D.Sydney Opera House is the single best known modern building in the world up to now


相关考题:

PowerDesigner Physical Architect是 ______工具。

Sydney Opera House will outlive the Guggenheim as an international architectural icon ______.A.because it is a global expression of cultural modernityB.because it is the first designed and built modern buildingC.because everyone in the world with media access knows what the Sydney Opera House looks likeD.because it is the pioneer in accomplishing such an international architectural icon

The design of the Sydney Opera House has been taken as a myth because ______.A.it was the workpiece of the famous architectB.it met most of the rules for architectural design at that timeC.the design project suggested by Utzon was unbuildableD.it was designed by an unknown architect and was thought unbuildable at that time

From the passage, we know Frank Uloyd Wright______.A.is the teacher of UtzonB.had good effect on the Utzon's architect careerC.was opposite to the rectilinear "international style" of its timeD.forced Utzon to leave Australia

In this passage, the author's tone and attitude towards the design and accomplishment of the Sydney Opera House is ______.A.highly criticalB.cold and objectiveC.sympathetic yet reservedD.positive and appreciative

Tommy enjoys to study opera.() 此题为判断题(对,错)。

The apron () between the mother and the children is so strong that its influence never stops.A、connectionB、bondC、relationD、thread

As a devoted wife and mother, she insists doing the homework all by herself and the ( ) tasks are never burden to her. A.house keptB.housekeepingC.home keptD.home keeping

Architect Mayur Kanaiya spoke()of the Langkawi Sky Bridge.A. goodB. wellC. highly

The opera is _____ on a true story.A: basisB: basicC: basingD: based

Jim: I have a pair of tickets to opera Saturday night. Would you like to go?Cindy: I don’t think so. __________________A: I’m not too wild about opera.B: I’ m not too interested about opera.C: I’m not very excited about opera.D: I’m not very anxious about opera.

In the old days, the children ____________ by the mother because she did not work outside the house.A、took care ofB、were taking care ofC、taken care ofD、were taken care of

It can be inferred from the last paragraph that _____.[A] the dream to build interplanetary Internet can be fulfilled in the future[B] interplanetary Internet will be commercialized in 100 years[C] the research of Internet took 50 years[D] it will take a long time to build interplanetary Internet

4.It __________ eight years to build the Dam(大坝) from 1998 t0 2006.A.spendsB.costsC.paidD.took

It took many months of __________to build the house.A.jobB.workC.labourD.task

共用题干I'll Be BachComposer David Cope is the inventor of a computer program that writes original works of classical music.It took Cope 30 years to develop the software.Now most people can't tell the difference between music by the famous German composer J.S.Bach(1685-1750)and the Bach-like compositions from Cope's computer.It all started in 1980 in the United States,when Cope was trying to write an opera.______(46)At first this music was not easy to listen to.What did Cope do?He began to rethink how human beings compose music.He realized that composers'brains work like big databases.First,they take in all the music that they have ever heard.______(47)Finally,they make new music from what is left.According to Cope,only the great composers are able to create the database accurately,remember it,and form new musical patterns from it.Cope built a huge database of existing music.He began with hundreds of works by Bach.The software analyzed the data:it broke it down into smaller pieces and looked for patterns.It then combined the pieces into new patterns._______(48)They weren't good,but it was a start.Cope knew he had more work to do-he had a whole opera to write.He continued to improve the software.Soon it could analyze more complex music.He also added many other composers,including his own work,to the database.A few years later,Cope's computer program,called"Emmy",was ready to help him with his opera.______(49)Cope listened to the computer's musical ideas and used the ones that he liked.With Emmy,the opera took only two weeks to finish.It was called Cradle Falling,and it was a great success! ______(50) Since that first opera,Emmy has written thousands of compositions,Cope still gives Emmy feedback on what he likes and doesn't like of her music,but she is doing most of the hard work of composing these days!______(48)A:By developing a computer software,David Cope aimed to write an opera.B:Cope received some of the best reviews of his career,but no one knew exactly how he had composed the work.C:He was having trouble thinking of new melodies,so he wrote a computer program to create the melodies.D:The process required a lot of collaboration between the composer and Emmy.E:Before long,the program could compose short Bach-like works.F:Then they take out the music that they dislike.

Although measures have been introduced to discourage the use of mobile telephone inside the opera house, ___effectiveness remains limited.A. they B. their C. them D. theirs

It took us a long time to mend the house.A:build B:destroy C:design D:repair

Internet Explorer、Firefox、Opera等软件属于()。

opera的原意是什么?

单选题_____ paid for the cost of the building of the Sydney Opera House.AUtzonBThe publicCQueen Elizabeth IIDThe government

单选题An architect planning a new house should always in mind his client’s needs.AcarryBtakeCtreatDbear

单选题The writer’s main rhetorical purpose in the essay is toAshow how artists have updated La Boheme for modern audiencesBillustrate the ways in which Baz Lurhmann transformed the opera into a musicalCexplain the differences between Rent and La BohemeDexplore the plight of tuberculosis victimsEupdate puccini’s opera for today’s youth

单选题Building the Sydney Opera House lasted _____.Afrom 1959 to 1973Bfrom 1962 to 1973Cfrom 1959 to 1967Dfrom 1962 to 1967

单选题Which is the best title for the passage?ASailing RoofBTraveling in SydneyCThe Sydney Opera HouseDThe Opening of the Opera House

单选题Jack enjoys()Peking Opera.Alisten toBlisteningClistenDlistening to

单选题The designer of the Sydney Opera House was from _____.AAmericaBAustraliaCEnglandDDenmark