253:, folding in architecture, 'blob' architecture, biomorphism, and digital architecture. The shift in emphasis can be pinpointed to a single edition of the journal, devoted to the two polar positions at that time: "Peter Eisenman versus Leon Krier: 'My ideology is better than yours.'" ('Architectural Design', 9-10/1989). The current avant-gardist interest of the journal in biomorphism is a return to issues the journal was covering in the 1960s and 1970s, before posism, with the architecture of
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The content of the journal is seen during the latter half of its history as running parallel with the cutting edge of avant-gardism, promoting innovation as well as celebrity status – '
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In its early days, the journal was more concerned with the
British architectural scene, but it gradually became more international in scope. In 1946
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Over time, the journal moved away from news coverage towards theme-based issues. During the late 1970s and 1980s it was a bastion of
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became editor and developed the magazine under the ownership of
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The journal went partly into decline with the demise of postmodernism, though it then shifted its coverage towards
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The publication became part of John Wiley & Sons in 1997 when it acquired AD's German publisher
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Science and technology magazines published in the United
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Bi-monthly magazines published in the United
Kingdom
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