In the years immediately following World War II, America
embraced modern architecture--not as something imported from
Europe, but as an entirely new mode of operation, with original and
captivating designs made in the USA. In Domesticity at War, Beatriz
Colomina shows how postwar American architecture adapted the
techniques and materials that were developed for military
applications to domestic use. Just as manufacturers were turning
wartime industry to peacetime productivity--going from missiles to
washing machines--American architects and cultural institutions
were, in Buckminster Fuller's words, turning "weaponry into
livingry."This new form of domesticity itself turned out to be a
powerful weapon. Images of American domestic bliss--suburban homes,
manicured lawns, kitchen accessories--went around the world as an
effective propaganda campaign. Cold War anxieties were masked by
endlessly repeated images of a picture-perfect domestic
environment. Even the popular conception of the architect became
domesticated, changing from that of an austere modernist to a
plaid-shirt wearing homebody.Colomina examines, with interlocking
case studies and an army of images, the embattled and obsessive
domesticity of postwar America. She reports on, among other things,
MOMA's exhibition of a Dymaxion Deployment Unit (DDU), a corrugated
steel house suitable for use as a bomb shelter, barracks, or
housing; Charles and Ray Eames's vigorous domestic life and their
idea of architecture as a flexible stage for the theatrical
spectacle of everyday life; and the American lawn as patriotic site
and inalienable right.Domesticity at War itself has a distinctive
architecture. Housed within the case are two units: one book of
text, and one book of illustrations--most of them in color,
including advertisements, newspaper and magazine articles,
architectural photographs, and more.
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