Nigel Young
British architect Terry Farrell's SIS Building -- also known as the MI6 Building -- at Vauxhall Cross, in London, is the headquarters of the Secret Intelligence Service. It was completed in 1994.
ED Jones/AFP/Getty Images
The vision of Catalan architect Enric Miralles, the Scottish Parliament building, in the Holyrood area of Edinburgh, controversially introduced postmodern design close to the ancient buildings of the Royal Mile and Holyrood Palace.
ED Jones/AFP/Getty Images
One distinctive feature of the building is its "Think Pods," designed as quiet places for politicians to contemplate and develop new ideas.
James Leynse/Corbis via Getty Images
The Bank of America Center in Houston, Texas, was completed in October 1983 and designed by award-winning architect Philip Johnson and partner John Burgee.
Rainer Kiedrowski/Newscom/picture-alliance/DUMONT Bildar
Designed by architect CZWG, the Cascades at Canary Wharf in London was completed in 1988 and has come to be recognized as a significant piece of postmodern architecture.
John and Jo Peck
With its red lacquer façade, CZWG Architects' bold China Wharf building, in London, is as striking today as it was on completion in 1988.
AFP/Getty Images
The Taipei 101 tower was the world's tallest building until the completion of the Burj Khalifa in Dubai. Its postmodern approach sees traditional elements given a modern twist.
Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images North America/Getty Images
Designed by famed architect Frank Gehry, the Binoculars Building in Los Angeles is currently home to Google. It incorporates the binoculars sculpture created by artists Claes Oldenburg and Coosje van Bruggen.
Richard Bryant / Arcaid
An egg cup finial on Terry Farrell's famous TV-am building in Camden, London.
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When Philip Johnson and John Burgee designed this New York building for American communications giant AT&T it was called the first postmodern skyscraper. Plans are currently afoot to redevelop the building at 550 Madison Avenue.

Editor’s Note: Owen Hopkins is senior curator at Sir John Soane’s Museum, and author of “Architecture and Freedom: searching for Agency in a Changing World.”

CNN  — 

Postmodernism is back. We see it in the slew of books and articles about the movement, in the campaigns to save some of its greatest landmarks such as Philip Johnson’s AT&T building in New York, in the listings in the UK of notable buildings such as James Stirling’s No. 1 Poultry, and John Outram’s Isle of Dogs pumping station.

We are even seeing a number of contemporary architects and designers taking inspiration from its garish colors and outlandish decorative schemes, such MVRDV in the Netherlands, ARM in Australia and even Caruso St John in the UK. What was once maligned for its association with British prime minister Margaret Thatcher and American president Ronald Reagan, vilified for its crass commercialism, and written off as the cultural embodiment of everything that was wrong with 1980s, is now, remarkably, undergoing a critical reassessment.

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"Think Pods" on the Scottish Parliament building in the Holyrood area of Edinburgh.

This all comes hot on the heels of the revival of interest in Brutalism – another previously much maligned style, which took hold between the 1950s and 70s. Yet in many ways postmodernism was Brutalism’s antithesis. Brutalism can be seen as modern architecture at its most radical: the idea that architecture might quite literally build a better world rendered into a stark aesthetic of bold abstract forms and raw concrete.

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The Balfron Tower in the Brutalist Brownfield Estate in London, England. Brutalism was popular between the 1950s and 70s, and is characterized by large forms and exposed concrete or brickwork. In 2016, the British transport minister, John Hayes, described such modernist as "aesthetically worthless."

By the 1970s, however, modern architecture was under attack, with some commentators arguing that rather than bringing about a better future, the modernist design of many housing estates, for example, had actually exacerbated the problems it aimed to solve.

Against this backdrop, the standard view of postmodernism sees it arriving as a ray of light, as a burst of color, energy and fun. While modernism had sought to draw a line under the past, postmodernism used it as a quarry of sources, references and quotations, deploying them with wit, irony and irreverence. After decades of being mute, architecture was allowed to speak again through color, ornament, decoration.

Reveling in the moment

Postmodernism did not seek to remake the world anew, but aimed to fit in with what already existed, reveling in the moment rather than bringing about an idealized future, before eventually succumbing to bad taste, kitsch and, ultimately, rejection.

While the neatness of this summary is alluring, on the ground the reality was rather more complex. Take Terry Farrell’s TV-am building in Camden: the new studio for the the UK’s first breakfast TV franchise is seen as one of the era-defining postmodern projects, reflecting the spirit of the 1980s.

Richard Bryant
Terry Farrel's TV-am building in Camden, London.

One of the criticisms often leveled at postmodernism, and this project in particular, was that it was like a stage set. But this is a curious thing to accuse the TV-am building of, because that was exactly what it was going for. Farrell realized that the building would be fundamental to the identity of this new corporate entity – the building would be its brand. This went as far the egg-cup finials that adorned the building’s exterior, which quickly became the studio’s calling card on trailers and idents.

Urban phenomenon

In Britain, at least, postmodernism was an urban phenomenon, and in part a response to the damage done in the name of modernism to many British cities.

Just look at the inner ring-road that encircles Birmingham’s center, or the M8 that runs through the heart of Glasgow. In the mid-1970s, a similar scheme was remarkably proposed for London’s Covent Garden, provoking such huge community resistance that eventually got it thrown out.

This set the scene for Jeremy Dixon’s competition-winning proposal for the redevelopment of the Royal Opera House, which aimed for urban repair rather than architectural revolution. Critically, Dixon saw the Opera House not as a single building but as part of the city, which should have multiple faces: neoclassical to the historic market where it recreated a lost colonnade, and modern to the more recent architecture of the surrounding streets.

James Leynse/Corbis via Getty Images
The Bank of America Center in Houston, Texas was completed in October 1983 and designed by award winning architect Philip Johnson and partner John Burgee.

Further east, in what became known as Docklands, a very different kind of postmodern urbanism could be found in the work of CZWG. By drawing on the area’s industrial heritage and combining it with contemporary references to fashion, a new architectural identity for the area was born.

A classic example is the Cascades in Canary Wharf, which arrived before the office buildings. Its innovation was to incorporate references to Victorian warehouses in the base of a 20-story building, which by its summit had morphed into the kind of tower that, up until that point, could only be found in New York or Hong Kong

This architectural approach proved critical to fashioning a new urban identity for an area still ravaged by deindustrialization – an idea taken to the extreme in John Outram’s pumping station which appears as a kind of Pomo/Art-Deco/Egyptian temple.

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John Outram's Storm Water Pumping Station, in the Isle of Dogs, London.

Everything was up for grabs

As these and other projects show, the postmodernism of the late 1970s and early 80s – which the Sir John Soane’s exhibition celebrates – was not simply a corrective or counterpoint to modernism, but a moment when old certainties were overturned and everything became up for grabs.

In the words of its foremost theorist Charles Jencks, it aimed for “modernism’s transcendence,” internalizing its lessons and insights but rejecting its dogma and freed from its earnestness.

That we can love styles as diametrically opposed as Brutalism and postmodernism is itself a very postmodern thing, and perhaps evidence of its ultimate triumph.

“The Return of the Past: Postmodernism in British Architecture” is at Sir John Soane’s Museum, London from 16 May to 26 August 2018.