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In "When Buildings Speak,"" "Anthony Alofsin explores the rich yet
often overlooked architecture of the late Austro-Hungarian Empire
and its successor states. He shows that several different styles
emerged in this milieu during the late nineteenth and early
twentieth centuries. Moreover, he contends that each of these
styles communicates to us in a manner resembling language and its
particular means of expression.
Covering a wide range of buildings--from national theaters to
crematoria, apartment buildings to warehouses, and sanatoria to
postal savings banks--Alofsin proposes a new way of interpreting
this language. He calls on viewers to read buildings in two ways:
through their formal elements and through their political, social,
and cultural contexts. By looking through Alofsin's eyes, readers
can see how myriad nations sought to express their autonomy by
tapping into the limitless possibilities of art and architectural
styles. And such architecture can still speak very powerfully to us
today about the contradictory issues affecting parts of the former
Habsburg Empire.
"The book itself as a production is spectacular."--David Dunster,
"Architectural Review"
A dazzling dual portrait of Frank Lloyd Wright and early
twentieth-century New York, revealing the city's role in
establishing the career of America's most famous architect Frank
Lloyd Wright (1867-1959) took his first major trip to New York in
1909, fleeing a failed marriage and artistic stagnation. He
returned a decade later, his personal life and architectural career
again in crisis. Booming 1920s New York served as a refuge, but it
also challenged him and resurrected his career. The city connected
Wright with important clients and commissions that would harness
his creative energy and define his role in modern architecture,
even as the stock market crash took its toll on his benefactors.
Wright denounced New York as an "unlivable prison" even as he
reveled in its culture. The city became an urban foil for Wright's
work in the desert and in the "organic architecture" he promoted as
an alternative to American Art Deco and the International Style.
New York became a major protagonist at the end of Wright's life, as
he spent his final years at the Plaza Hotel working on the
Guggenheim Museum, the building that would cement his legacy.
Anthony Alofsin has broken new ground by mining the recently opened
Wright archives held by Columbia University and the Museum of
Modern Art. His foundational research provides a crucial and
innovative understanding of Wright's life, his career, and the
conditions that enabled his success. The result is at once a
stunning biography and a glittering portrait of early
twentieth-century Manhattan.
ARE YOU IN THE MARKET TO BUY A NEW HOME? Are you a real estate
agent or builder whose clients need help in buying their new home?
Do you wish there was one simple guide that helps you through the
process of buying a home and explains everything from the key
players in the housing business to interior design choices and
architectural styles? DREAM HOME is that guide. It provides home
buyers with insightful commentary on the American housing industry
and turns readers into more informed real estate consumers. This
book will help you: * learn about the process of making and
marketing houses * understand how selecting options for your home
is a major cost factor * consider the impact of styles and themes
on the identity of your home * communicate what you want instead of
automatically accepting what you are offered. This is the DELUXE
EDITION with full color illustrations. You can also buy an E-book
version. An economy edition with black and white illustrations is
available. The text is the same for both editions.
ARE YOU IN THE MARKET TO BUY A NEW HOME? Are you a real estate
agent or builder whose clients need help in buying their new home?
Do you wish there was one simple guide that helps you through the
process of buying a home and explains everything from the key
players in the housing business to interior design choices and
architectural styles? DREAM HOME is that guide. The ECONOMY-PRICED
EDITION, printed with black and white illustrations, provides home
buyers with insightful commentary on the American housing industry
and turns readers into more informed real estate consumers. This
book will help you: * learn about the process of making and
marketing houses * understand how selecting options for your home
is a major cost factor * consider the impact of styles and themes
on the identity of your home * communicate what you want instead of
automatically accepting what you are offered. A deluxe edition
color edition is also available.
Halflife is a fictive memoir, hovering between fiction and
biography. Deciding that half his life is over, a young man recalls
stories of people, animals, plants, and places that he he has
known. Just as matter decays according to its own physical half
life, these accounts are bound together by themes of loss, but they
also reverberate with creation and delight. The metaphor of
halflife, the measure of physical decay, weaves in and out of the
stories. The soothing of loss is found in the observation of life
around us. The journey unwinds in five chapters that describe
mountains, desert, Villa Trice (a mysterious estate in Texas),
Aquidneck Island, and Memphis, Tenessee. The writing is crisp and
elegant. The author is an artist, architect, and historian.
Halflife is his first work of fiction and memoir.
Ask Americans to think of a famous architect and the person they
are most likely to name is Frank Lloyd Wright. Wright's work, his
reputation, and his long and colorful career have made him an icon
of modern American architecture. But despite his status as
America's most celebrated architect, his influence throughout an
active practice spanning the years 1896 to 1959 is so wide and
complex that it has been difficult to grasp fully.
The essays in this book look not at the United States, the context
usually associated with Wright, but at countries around the globe.
Anthony Alofsin has assembled a superb collection of scholars to
examine Wright's importance from Japan to Great Britain, France to
Chile, Mexico to Russia, and the Middle East. Interwoven in the
essays are stories of champions and critics, rivals and acolytes,
books and exhibitions, attitudes toward America and individualism,
and the many ways Wright's ideas were brought to the world.
Together the essays represent a first look at Wright's impact
abroad, some from the perspective of natives of the countries
discussed and others from that of informed outsiders. Of special
note is Bruno Zevi's firsthand account of traveling with Wright in
Italy. Zevi was instrumental in bringing Wright's ideas to Italy
and in helping launch the movement for organic architecture. Of
unusual interest in light of today's events in Iraq is Mina
Marefat's essay on Wright's elaborate designs for a cultural center
for the city of Baghdad. The Baghdad projects, which were never
realized after the assassination of King Faisal II, were Wright's
principal focus in his last decade.
In searching out the little known rather than reexamining the
well-established aspects of Frank Lloyd Wright's work, this
collection is a rewarding exploration of his vision and influence.
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Paperback
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R383
R346
Discovery Miles 3 460
Not available
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