Franco Purini
He studied architecture in Rome with Ludovico Quaroni, earning his degree in 1971. He spent his free time in the company of Franco Libertucci, Achille Perilli, and Lorenzo Taiuti.
After his first work experiences with Maurizio Sacripanti and Vittorio Gregotti, he joined the "Belice 80" workshop. Starting in 1969, he taught mainly at the universities of Florence and Cosenza. After a brief period of teaching in Reggio Calabria and Rome, he became a professor at the IUAV in Venice. Since 2003, he has taught at the Sapienza University of Rome.
For his accomplishments in his field as an architect and theoretician, he was elected Accademico Corrispondente in the Academy of Arts and Drawings of Florence.
Starting in 1966, he established a lifelong collaboration in Rome with his wife, Laura Thermes, with whom he participated in the Venice Biennale and the Milan Triennale.
In 1980, he was one of the architects called by Paolo Portoghesi to the Venice Biennale to participate in the "Strada Novissima" installation, which became a manifesto of postmodern architecture.
His projects often feature dense patterns of lines and cross-references. His structures echo rationalism and the classical tradition, citing the works of Maurizio Sacripanti and Giovan Battista Piranesi. Provided by Wikipedia
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