Hubert Tonka (born 1943) is a French sociologist and urban planner who edited the Utopie magazine, and was one of the leaders of the Utopie movement in the late 1960s and early 1970s.[1]
Career
For family reasons, Tonka had to start work at a very young age. In Paris around 1960 he was taking night classes for a diploma in urban planning while working in the day, where he met other members of what would become the Utopie group.[2]
He worked as a plasterer in the day.[3]
He became the assistant of Henri Lefebvre, who was a professor at the University of Paris's institute of urban planning.[4]
He was an aesthete, and a refined typographer.
By the end of 1966 he was a member of the editorial committee of Melp!, the École Nationale Supérieure des Beaux-Arts student association's review, along with Jacques Barda, Roland Castro, Pierre Granveaud and Antoine Grumbach.[5]Melp! helped to articulate the dissatisfaction of students in the lead-up to the protests of 1968.[6]
Tonka was co-founder of the Vincennes department of urbanism.[7]
The Utopie group originated from a meeting at Lefebvre's house in 1966.
It included the architects Jean Aubert, Jean-Paul Jungmann and Antoine Stinco, the landscape architect Isabelle Auricoste (his wife) and the sociologists Jean Baudrillard, René Lourau and Catherine Cot.[1]Utopie, review de sociologie de l'urbain first appeared in May 1967, with Tonka as managing editor.[8]
Tonka created L'Imprimerie Quotidienne, which printed the magazine.[9]
Tonka edited and promoted collections of Baudrillard's essays, helping to draw the attention of the public to his views, which were at first Marxist but later moved towards the center.[10]
Tonka became a Director at the French Institute of Architecture (1987) and a Professor of architecture and contemporary art in Bordeaux and Angers (1994).[11]
In the 1990s Tonka and singer, songwriter and author Jeanne-Marie Sens founded the publishing house Sens & Tonka.
Tonka and Sens co-authored and published several books on architecture.
Views
Tonka gave life to the Pneumatic concepts of the Utopie group, which advocated ephemeral, inflatable structures.[5]
Tonka held extreme left opinions, close to the anarchists, that could be traced back to Rosa Luxemburg and Mikhail Bakunin.[12]
Talking of the intellectual roots of the Utopie group, Tonka said:[13]
I have a whole culture which comes from Batavian Marxism, that is to say Anton Pannekoek and Herman Gorter, and it has nothing to do with French Marxism. I discovered this culture in working in the Institute of Social History in Amsterdam... I discovered "secrets" from Lefebvre, who did not want to widen that membership ... there was also Archigram, there was also the Situs [situationists], and then there was everything that was around and that we saw: there was Arguments, Socialisme ou Barbarre...
In a 1971 interview Tonka said "To imagine ... that it is possible to act politically through urbanism, architecture, and the detournement of either is a dream."
He believed that only a revolution could change society, and this could only happen in spite of architecture, which is by definition repressive.[14]
Selected bibliography
Jeanne-Marie Sens; Dominique Perrault; Hubert Tonka; Georges Fessy (1991). L'Hôtel industriel Berlier, Paris 13e arrondissement, France, de Dominique Perrault, architecte. Pandora. p. 56.
Jeanne-Marie Sens; Massimiliano Fuksas; Hubert Tonka; Doriana O. Mandrelli (1991). Là & ailleurs: Massimiliano Fuksas : vingt-cinq années d'architecture en Italie, en France, et en Allemagne. Pandora. p. 104.
Jeanne-Marie Sens; Hubert Tonka; Massimiliano Fuksas; Doriana O. Mandrelli (1992). Locus & Beyond: Massimiliano Fuksas : Twenty-five Years of Architecture in Italy, France, and Germany. Pandora Editions. p. 104. ISBN9782742100248.
Hubert Tonka; Jean Nouvel; Sens, Jeanne-Marie Sens (1994). "Le bateau ivre" de Jean Nouvel: immeuble Cartier, 261 boulevard Raspail à Paris. Sens & Tonka. p. 95. ISBN9782910170547.
Hubert Tonka (1994). Une maison particulière à Floirac (Gironde) de Anne Lacaton & Jean-Philippe Vassal, architectes. Sens & Tonka. p. 44. ISBN2910170152.
Hubert Tonka; Rudy Ricciotti; Jeanne-Marie Sens (1995). "Rouge & noir": le stadium à Vitrolles de Rudy Ricciotti, architecte. Sens & Tonka. p. 70. ISBN9782910170127.
Jeanne-Marie Sens; Hubert Tonka (1997). Les ateliers du parc: école d'architecture de Normandie à Rouen de Patrice Mottini, architecte. Sens & Tonka. p. 70. ISBN9782910170264.