"Graphic Assembly traces recent ineluctable change in the DNA of architecture with compelling force. Connecting media construction to construction on building sites, Craig Buckley convincingly argues that print-based montage shared conceptual ground with metallic assembly after WWII in a critical historical intersection. By tying together a range of activities heretofore only notionally connected, the book ushers out a period of postwar history that haunts the present with images of ad hoc material improvisation and manual work. Graphic Assembly will shift the ground for studies of architecture and media, prompting new research on what followed and preceded the history it narrates."-Claire Zimmerman, author of Photographic Architecture in the Twentieth Century
"Graphic Assembly stages a brilliant recasting of the role of montage practices within the experimental architecture of the 1960s, turning toward the media-technical underpinning, material specificity, and visual logics of practices of assembly as well as the cultural effects of their envisioning. Full of vivid, original, precise, and archivally-rich readings of works by Archigram, Hans Hollein, Utopie, Superstudio and more, Craig Buckley draws out the technical and historical nuances of their construction to provide a powerful new account of architectures entanglements with media and the intermedial tension to which it gave rise. A major contribution to architectural and media-historical scholarship, Graphic Assembly dismantles conventional distinctions-the semiotic and the concrete, images and buildings, print and electronic media-to offer a rich and compelling reading of such mediating entities as they emerged from and operated within the dispersed and fluid dispositif of this historical moment."-Felicity Scott, author of Outlaw Territories: Environments of Insecurity/Architectures of Counterinsurgency
"The writing is crisp and academic with a rich appendix that appends a meticulously researched text. The images themselves, including forty-seven color plates, are particularly illuminating."-ARLIS/NA
"With many illustrations, 47 color images, and endnotes, this hefty, sturdy volume will appeal to enthusiasts of the avant-garde."-CHOICE